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HARVARD UNIVERSITY. 


LIBRARY 


OF THE 


MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY 
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Febwauy : ie june 12, 1919. 


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PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


New England Zoological Ciub 


VO OEM Ever 


CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS: 


1916-19 
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Pages 1-7 
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19-22 

23 
25-27 
29-35 


37-38 
39-50 


51-52 
53-56 
57-72 
73-76 
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81-82 
83-84 
85-86 
87-89 


91-92 
93-94 


95-98 


CONTENTS OF VOLUME VI 


A third species of Chilonycteris from Cuba, by GLovEeR 
Morir Aman. platen. hae asa cee Soe cea 
Four new and interesting ants from the mountains of 
Borneo and Luzon, by W1tLt1AM Morton WHEELER.... 
New amphibians and a new reptile from Sarawak, by 
Tuomas Barpour and GLADWYN KinGLsEy NOBLE .... 
The smaller mockingbird of the northern Bahamas, by 
OUTRAMEBIANGS ecru ncie ae elie tel ee eee ee ae 
Two undescribed birds from the Falkland Islands, by 
WINTHROP SPRAGUE BROOKS 05.5 5 cee Sale cute ae tae 
Two new ants from Texas and Arizona, by WILLIAM 
IMGRTON Wiebe hea bih t)5 .)e yee ae RA RU a he age 
A new swift from Santo Domingo, by JAMEs Ler PETERS. . 
New American Sphingidae, by BENJAMIN Preston CLaRK. 
Av plabese.: Biwi cite REISS Lo sat lel aries ogo er ag 
Two new West Indian birds, by THoMas Barsour and 
WINTHROP SPRAGUE BROOKS...........2240c0000000- 
An extinct Cuban Capromys, by GLover Morritt ALLEN 
New Sphingidae, by BENJAMIN Preston CiarK. 3 plates 
Notes on the geographical races of Tangara gyroloides, by 
OUTRAM, BANGSH le P fs, ena Be ee CD of | ce ae 
An undescribed race of Henslow’s sparrow, by WILLIAM 
SRR WSTEB 1d Sissel Ms Sali! te Aaa dn uaa a ea 
Two undescribed Newfoundland birds, by CHar.es Foster 
ES ACEC TUIDUAD) EER bs 2x eee ch atc Aaa. aks ac oe aehe Aenea oat a ae 
Vermileo comstockt, sp. nov., an interesting Leptid fly from 
California, by W1LL1AM Morton WHEELER........... 
Description of a new woodpecker from Peru, by Ourram 
BANGS andi Gis NOBLE Asi). oe stceasae wee ors ase 
Notes on the species and subspecies of Paecilonitta Eyton, 
DYLOUTRAMUBDANGSIAS ous. 5 vas shea okt ahaa eee 
A new genus of Caprimulgidae, by OuTRAM BaNGs........ 
A new race of the black-throated green wood warbler, by 
OUPRAM/ BANGS sins Sues hate atin ae Ue 


ING ihe Ane! A Sse 8d ak Ob en aes ee ae a 


99-114 Some undescribed Sphingidae, by BENJAMIN PRESTON 


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Fesruary 8, 1916 Vor. VI, pp. 1-7 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 


A THIRD SPECIES OF CHILONYCTERIS FROM CUBA. 


BY GLOVER MORRILL ALLEN. 


In the Greater Antilles two species of bats of the genus Chilonyc- 
teris are well known to occur: a larger (C. parnelliz), and a much 
smaller (C. macleayii). The typical form of the latter is from 
Cuba, and slightly differentiated races are currently recognized 
in Jamaica, in Haiti and San Domingo, and in Porto Rico. Of the 
larger species, the type is from Jamaica, and a local form is de- 
scribed from Cuba, and another from Porto Rico. As yet the larger 
species is unrecorded from Haiti and San Domingo, though its 
presence there can hardly be doubted. 

In 1900, Messrs. William Palmer and J. H. Riley collected a 
large series of Chilonycteris from two localities in Cuba: Guanajay 
and Baracoa. Four of these proved to be the Cuban representative 
of C. parnellii (C. p. boothi), and the others were all referred by 
Mr. G. S. Miller, Jr.,! to C. macleayii. Nevertheless he discovered 
that these again were readily separated into two series: one repre- 
senting a larger, the other a smaller form, “the differences between 


1 Miller, G.S, Jr., Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 1904, vol. 27, p. 342. 


x 


N.E.Z.C. 
2 ALLEN — CHILONYCTERIS TORREI Pa a 


which are fairly constant and quite independent of age and sex.” 
He supposed these represented two variants of a single dimorphic 
species. Subsequently Rehn,' in his revision of the genus, working 
with part of Miller’s series, followed him in treating the two as one 
species, macleayit, and so they have since stood. 

Through the generous interest of Professor Carlos de la Torre, 
of the Universidad de la Habana, the Museum of Comparative 
Zoology has lately received a collection of bats in alcohol from the 
caves at Baracoa and Maisi, Cuba. Among the specimens are 
several Chilonycteris, some of which represent the larger, some the 
smaller of the two supposed variants of macleayit. The striking 
contrast in bulk between the two led me to examine the series 
more closely, with the result that several characters were found 
which sufficiently establish the specific distinctness of the large and 
the small bats. In the larger species the fleshy protuberances at 
the sides of the nostrils are more prominent, and the upper rim of 
each nostril is produced into a squarish lobe. In the smaller spe- 
cies the lateral lobes are less prominent, while the upper border 
of the nostril, instead of forming an erect lobe, is rimmed by a 
series of from four to six small wart-like papillae. The ears of the 
larger species are proportionally broader, and on the inner edge, 
near the point of greatest width, bear three small blunt papillae, 
which in the smaller bat are more prominent and tooth-like. The 
skulls of the two show further differences. In addition to its much 
less size, that of the smaller species is more pointed at the muzzle 
in dorsal view, and the interorbital region is more abruptly con- 
stricted. In his paper previously quoted Mr. Miller states that 
part of his series was sent to the British Museum for comparison 
with Gray’s type of macleayii, with the result that the name was 
found to have been based on the larger of these two bats. This 
leaves the smaller animal without a name, unless Gundlach’s 
Lobostoma quadridens* can be satisfactorily identified with it. 
But this seems not to be the case. The greater part of his descrip- 
tion applies equally to both species. The name quadridens is 


1 Rehn, J. A. G., Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci., Phila., 1904, p. 186. 
2 Gundlach, J., Arch. f. Naturgesch., 1840, vol. 6, pt. 1, p. 357. 


Ee | ALLEN — CHILONYCTERIS TORREI 3 
evidently based on the fact that, at the point of greatest breadth 
of the ear, Gundlach found four small tooth-like projections (“4 
Zibnchen’’). These are present in both species, though more 
prominent in the smaller. Their number, however, in our speci- 
mens does not exceed three on each ear. The only part of Gund- 
lach’s description that seems diagnostic, is the following: The 
fleshy papillae at the side of the nose on its upper rim projecting 
in a point (“Die Hautlappen zur Seite der Nase an ihrem oberen 
Rande in eine Spitze hervortretend”’). Though not altogether 
clear, this description, as may be seen by reference to the figures 
(Plate I, figures 1, 2) seems to apply better to the larger bat, whether 
the papillae intended be those on the upper margin of each nostril 
or the fleshy protuberances one at each side on the upper lip. The 
few measurements given are: length of the entire body (“ganzen 
Korpers”), 1’ 63’” = 39.2 mm.; tail in the membrane, 63’” = 
13.7 mm.; free part of tail, 3” = 6.3 mm.; calcar, 73"’ = 16 mm.; 
expanse, 8” 3’ = 209.5 mm. If ‘entire body’ means head and 
body, the measurement 39 mm. is nearer that of the smaller animal; 
yet, as Miller’s table of dimensions shows, the head-and-body 
measurement of the smaller bat may be as great as 45.6 mm. or as 
small as 40; on the other hand the same dimension of the larger 
species may vary between 40 and 51 mm. However, the measure- 
ment is one that cannot be made with great accuracy in alcoholic 
or even fresh specimens. The sum of Gundlach’s measurements of 
head and body plus tail is 59.2 mm., which is smaller than any of the 
total-length measurements published by Miller for the two species, 
though in consequence agreeing more nearly with that of the 
smaller. The tail measurement (20 mm.) is more nearly that of 
the latter also. All Gundlach’s measurements are small, yet, of 
themselves, they are insufficient to be characteristic of either spe- 
cles; we may even suppose his specimen to have been young or 
shrunken in preservative, or his method of measurement may have 
been different. It seems clear that his description is not suffi- 
ciently diagnostic to render the name quadridens certainly appli- 
cable to either species. He may have had both before him at the 
time. Though his measurements accord more nearly with those 
of the smaller species, his description of the nose lappets seems 


P.N.E.Z.C. 
CHILONYCTERIS TORREI [ Vol. VI 


4 ALLEN 


better to fit the larger, macleayii, of which L. quadridens has been 
usually considered a synonym, and I shall therefore continue to 
regard it so. 

The smaller bat may be known as 


Chilonycteris torrei sp. nov. 


1840. Lobostoma quadridens Gundlach, Arch. f. Naturgesch., vol. 6, pt. 1, 
p. 357 (part ?). 

1855. Chilonycteris quadridens Wagner, Schreber’s Saiugethiere, Suppl., 
vol. 5, p. 678 (part ?; quotation of Gundlach). 

1904. Chilonycteris macleayit Miller, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., vol. 27, p. 342 
(part; the “smaller form’’). 

1904. Chilonycteris macleayii Rehn, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., p. 185 
(part; the ‘‘smaller form’’). 


Type, adult female, alcoholic with dry skull, no. 11,672, Museum of 
Comparative Zoélogy, from La Cueva de la Majana, Baracoa, Cuba; 
collected June 15, 1915, by Senor Victor Jose Rodriguez y Verrier and 
presented by Professor Carlos de la Torre y Huerta. 

General Characters.— Slightly smaller than C. macleayii, with forearm 
36-38 mm., against 41-48 mm. in the latter; the fleshy papilla at each side 
of the muzzle lower and less prominent; the dorsal rim of each nostril 
surmounted by a transverse row of from four to six small roundish warts 
(Plate I, fig. 1); a low transverse cutaneous ridge on the muzzle behind 
the nose pad; a group of two or three minute tooth-like papillae at a point 
about half-way on the inner margin of the ear, more attenuated than in 
macleayit. Skull smaller than in macleayii, the muzzle less inflated. 

Description.— The color does not appear to be different from that of 
macleayii. Size, however, smaller throughout; ear proportionally a trifle 
narrower; the minute papillae half-way on its inner margin distinctly more 
prominent and filiform. The structure of the chin lappets is practically 
the same in both species, but the protuberances of the muzzle differ notably. 
In macleayzi the two lateral papillae are more prominent, and on the upper 
rim of each nostril is a squarish lobe separated by a well-marked notch 
from its fellow on the other nostril. In torre the upper edge of the nostrils 
is not produced into a lobe, but each is rimmed by a transverse line of from 
four to six low rounded warts, with a median depression barely indicated. 
A low cutaneous ridge is present on the muzzle behind the nose pad, but 
is practically absent in macleayii. The caleaneum, as in macleayii, is long 
and slender; it terminates in a minute lobe at the point of greatest length 
of the interfemoral membrane, In the type this lobe is exceptionally 


Feb. | ALLEN — CHILONYCTERIS TORREI 5 


prominent. The free edge of the interfemoral membrane between these 
tips of the calcanea is slightly thickened, but not otherwise peculiar. 
In macleayii, on the other hand, the longitudinal lines of minute papillae 
with which the membrane is studded, become raised and thickened so as 
to form eight longitudinal ridges, well marked, at the free border of the 
membrane. In other particulars of external structure the two species seem 
to be practically alike. 

Skull.— In addition to its much smaller size, the skull of C. torrez is less 
inflated at the tip of the rostrum, as compared with that of C. macleayii, so 
that in dorsal view the muzzle is decidedly more tapering. This fact was 
noticed by Rehn, who, however, supposed it to be a sexual character of 
the males of the latter species. The interorbital constriction is slightly 
more abrupt, giving, from above, a rounder outline to the brain-case; a 
distinet isthmus, bounded by a transverse sulcus at either end, marks off 
the brain-case from the rostrum somewhat more sharply than in macleayii. 

Except for slight differences of proportion, the teeth of the two species 
seem to be essentially similar. The molars of C. torre are relatively larger, 
however, so that the palatal region between the molar rows is decidedly 
more narrowed; the minute lower premolar (pm;) seems to be crowded 
slightly more to the inner side of the tooth-row as well. 

Measurements — In his paper of 1904, Mr. Miller (p. 343) gives the 
external measurements of a series of both these species under the name 
macleayti. The individuals with forearm measurements 36-38 mm. are 
torre. It will therefore suffice to append the dimensions of the type of 
lorrei, with the corresponding measurements of a specimen of macleayii 
(M.C. Z., no. 11,668) in parenthesis, following each: head and body (anus 
to muzzle, approximately), 40 mm. (43); tail from anus (approximately), 
19.5 (25.5); ear from meatus, 15.5 (18); tibia, 15.5 (17); hind foot, 8 (9); 
forearm, 37 (43); third finger, 69.5 (74.5); fifth finger, 44 (50). Skull: 
greatest length, 14.5 (16.1); basal length, 12.2 (13.8); palatal length, 
7.2 (8.2); zygomatic breadth, 7.7 (8); greatest breadth at base of rostrum, 
6 (6.5); mastoid width, 7.6 (8.2); width of brain-case, 6.7 (7.3); inter- 
orbital constriction, 3 (3); upper tooth-row, 7.0 (7.8); lower tooth-row, 
7.0 (7.8). 


Remarks.— It is a pleasure to associate with this species the 
name of Professor de la Torre, to whose keen interest in the natural 
history of Cuba many important discoveries are due. 

The recognition of this third West Indian species of Chilonycteris 
makes it necessary to determine if the representatives of the genus 
on other Greater Antillean islands that have hitherto been con- 
sidered subspecies of macleayzi are really of that type; it will also 


eee 
Vol. VI. 


6 ALLEN — CHILONYCTERIS TORREI 
be interesting to discover if both species have mainland representa- 
tives. <A series from Jamaica, presented by Dr. J. A. Cushman, is 
unquestionably the subspecies C. macleayii grisea of Gosse, and 
agrees perfectly in the general characters of ear notches and nose- 
leaf with macleayii. Rehn, in recognizing this subspecies in his 
review (1904), describes it well, and Dobson’s figure of the type 
specimen leaves no room for doubt. 

In his key to the species of the genus, Rehn (1904) groups with 
‘macleayii’ ( = torrei, part) the subspecies fuliginosa Gray, from 
Haiti, and inflata Rehn, from Porto Rico, because the “cutaneous 
ridge surmounting the superior margin of the nostrils” is “without 
a deep median emargination”’ —a fact which seems to fix the re- 
lationship of Rehn’s specimens with the small species torrez. It is 
not so clear that Gray’s specimen was one of this group, however. 
His all too brief description (Proc. Zoél. Soc. London, 1843, p. 20) 
gives little that is diagnostic. The forearm measurement he says 
is 1 inch, 7 lines, (= 40 mm.), while Rehn gives 37.7 mm. It is 
not impossible that Gray may have had a representative of the 
macleayit group, and Rehn a form of the smaller torret. In that 
case torre? would stand as a subspecies of C. inflata, or if Rehn’s 
assumption is correct, both would be forms of fuliginosa. Until 
a final revision of the West Indian species can be made, however, 
forrei May stand as an insular species. Rehn has pointed out the 
characters separating fuliginosa and inflata trom the last, which he 
called macleayii. The “short and bullate rostrum” and “rather 
expanded zygomata”’ of znflata are distinctive, while fuliginosa 
(of Rehn), with its short calcanea, is the smallest of the group. 

From the resemblance in size and in the general form of the nose 
pad and cutaneous ridge on the rostrum, it seems not unlikely that 
C. parnellit is the Antillean representative of C. rubiginosa mexi- 
cana of the mainland of Mexico (Oaxaca and Vera Cruz, southward). 
The continental relatives of the two other species (macleayw and 
torre’) are yet to be determined, but, to judge from Rehn’s careful 
description, C. psilotis Dobson is very similar to torre in the form 
of the nose pad and in the shape of the ear, with its four prominent 
denticles on the internal margin. It is, however, a somewhat 
larger bat. Dobson’s original specimen was without record of 


ree ALLEN — CHILONYCTERIS TORREI 


<3 


locality, but Miller in 1902 (Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, vol. 15, 
p. 249) recorded specimens from the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. 
Dr. J. A. Allen in 1911 considered these as probably identical 
with C. personata from Venezuela. 

The almost total lack of a transverse fleshy ridge on the muzzle 
behind the nose is a character, so far as known, peculiar to C. 
macleayti and its races; and, together with the form of the nose 
pad, it would be a good clue to possible relationship, should a 
continental species be found in which these structures are similar. 


EXPLANATION OF THE PLATE. 


Figure 1. Nose pad of Chilonycteris torrei, X 4.5. 
Figure 2. Nose pad of Chilonycteris macleayti, X 4.5. 


Figure 3. Ear of C. torrei, to show its narrowness and the denticles on 
the inner margin, X 3.5. 


Figure 4. Har of C. macleayit, X 3.5. 


yas © 


Frsruary 10, 1916 Vou. VI, pp. 9-18 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 


FOUR NEW AND INTERESTING ANTS FROM THE 
MOUNTAINS OF BORNEO AND LUZON. 


BY WILLIAM MORTON WHEELER. 


For some time specimens of ants from Borneo, the Philippines 
and other East Indian ‘islands have been accumulating in my 
collection. Among these are four species belonging to rare and 
archaic genera, and although they are represented by single speci- 
mens, it seems advisable to describe and figure them by them- 
selves, as pressure of other work may greatly delay publication of 
the entire collection. The first species described below, Metapone 
bakeri, belongs to an extraordinary, recently discovered East 
Indian and Australian genus, which in certain respects is inter- 
mediate between two great subfamilies, the Ponerine and Myrmi- 
cine, although it has now been assigned to a special tribe of the 
latter. The second species, Dilobocondyla borneénsis, belongs to a 
small and imperfectly known group of rare ants allied to Atopo- 
myrmex. 'The third ant, Myrmoteras donisthorpei, is of peculiar 
interest because it is the unknown female of a singular genus 
founded many years ago by Forel on worker specimens of another 
species, taken in Burma by the late Col. C. F. Bingham. These 
ants, though very highly specialized, are evidently very rare sur- 
vivors of an ancient, probably Mesozoic, fauna. The fourth 


t 


10 WHEELER — ANTS FROM BORNEO AND Luzon [PQuP¥iO 


species, Dimorphomyrmex luzonensis, is also a very ancient form. 
The genus is known from two species in the Baltic Amber (Lower 
Oligocene) and a single extant species from Borneo. The female 
of the genus, however, was previously unknown. 


Metapone bakeri sp. nov. 


Figure 1. 


Female. Length 6.4 mm. 

Head subrectangular, longer than broad, distinctly broader behind than 
in front, with scarcely concave posterior border, rounded posterior corners 
and rather convex cheeks. Eyes large, feebly convex, their anterior 


Figure 1.— Melapone bakeri sp. nov. a, Female in profile: 6, head of same, dorsal 
view; c, petiole and postpetiole, dorsal view. 


orbits at the median transverse diameter of the head; ocelli rather small. 
Mandibles moderately convex, with abruptly bent tips, the apical border 
with four subequal, acute teeth and a rounded basal lobe. Clypeus convex, 


—S 
j 

a 
<i 

2 


Feb. ar] 
1916 


WHEELER — ANTS FROM BORNEO AND LUZON 11 
its median lobe projecting, straight in the middle, with a blunt tooth-like 
projection on each side, not separated behind by a suture from the head. 
Frontal carinze overarching well-developed scrobes for the accommodation 
of the antenne as in the other species of the genus, continued anteriorly 
into sharp lateral expansions of the clypeus. Though deep above, the 
scrobes become broad and much shallower ventrally, where they pass 
over into the cheeks without ventral bounding ridges. Antenne inserted 
under the dorsal borders of the scrobes at about their middle, much flat- 
tened, 11-jointed; the scape very short, elliptical, a little more than twice 
as long as broad and extending only to about the middle of the dorsal orbit. 
First funicular joint a little more than one and one-half times as long as 
broad; joints 2-6 much broader than long, seventh joint relatively longer, 
joints 8-10 forming a very distinct club, the eighth and ninth subequal and 
each nearly as long as broad, together as long as the broadly elliptical 
terminal joint. Thorax narrower than the head, very long, nearly three 
times as long as high, broadest in the region of the insertion of the fore 
wings, its sides submarginate above; pronotum with subangular humeri, 
broader than long, separated by a pronounced suture from the mesonotum, 
which together with the scutellum is broadly elliptical and longer than 
broad; epinotum subcuboidal, with parallel sides, longer than broad, its 
base in profile feebly and evenly convex, longer than the perpendicular 
and inferiorly concave declivity into which it passes through a rounded 
but abrupt angle. Petiole seen from above narrower than the epinotum, 
a little longer than broad, broader behind than in front, with marginate an- 
terior, lateral and posterior borders, the anterior and lateral borders straight, 
the posterior deeply and somewhat angularly excised in the middle, so that 
the segment has two large, flat, posteriorly directed tooth-like projections; 
in profile the petiole is anvil-shaped, fully one and one half times as high 
as long, with the sides decidedly concave as are also the anterior and 
posterior surfaces. Its upper surface is horizontal, its ventral surface with 
two large, blunt, angular projections. Postpetiole from above transversely 
elliptical, broader than the petiole and nearly twice as broad as long, its 
anterior and lateral borders convex and evenly rounded, its anterior and 
lateral surfaces abrupt, its posterior border straight; in profile it is sub- 
triangular, with straight dorsal and short ventral surface, provided with a 
blunt projection in front and a small tooth behind. Gaster rather small, 
suboblong, with rounded anterior border and feebly convex, subparallel 
sides. Sting well developed but slender. Legs short, the femora broad 
and elliptical, distinctly compressed. ‘Tips of tibie and metatarsi of the 
middle and hind legs with spurs and a circlet of teeth, much as in the other 
species of the genus. Wings rather short, with closed marginal cell, a 
single cubital and a well-developed discal cell. Apterostigma rather large. 

Extremely smooth and shining throughout, with sparse, very inconspicu- 
ous, piligerous punctures on the upper surface; posterior portion of anten- 
nal scrobes densely, longitudinally striated. 


12 WHEELER — ANTS FROM BORNEO AND LUZON [En ae 


Hairs whitish, short, sparse, erect, nearly lacking on the pleure, most 
conspicuous on the gaster and legs. 

Black; mandibles tinged with red; antennz, fore legs, tibie, tarsi and 
tips and bases of femora of the middle and hind pairs, reddish castaneous; 
wings feebly infuscated, especially along the anteroapical margin; veins 
resin-colored; apterostigma dark brown. 

Described from a single specimen taken by Prof. C. F. Baker on Mt. 
Banahao, Luzon Island, Philippines. 


The genus Metapone was founded in 1911 by Forel on a species 
(M. greeni) from Peradenyia, Ceylon. As the types were taken by 
Mr. E. E. Green “from galleries in a decayed branch, which was 
also infested by two species of termites,’ Forel concluded that 
Metapone must be termitophagous. In 1913 he described a second 
species (M. sauteri) from a female taken by H. Sauter at Yokutsu, 
Formosa, and in 1915 a third species (M. mjébergi) taken by Dr. E. 
Mjéberg at Malanda, Queensland. The Museum of South Aus- 
tralia has recently sent me several worker and female specimens 
of this last species taken by Mr. A. M. Lea on Mt. Tambourine, 
Queensland, and at Dorrigo, New South Wales. All of these 
species differ from M. bakeri in several characters, such as the shape 
of the head, petiole and postpetiole, and in color and sculpture. 
They are all dark brown, much less shining, and have the head and 
thorax longitudinally striated. It thus appears that the genus 
Metapone, though only recently brought to light, has a wide dis- 
tribution in the Indomalayan and Australian regions and comprises 
at least four species. 


Dilobocondyla borneénsis sp. nov. 


Figure 2. 


Worker. Length 4.5 mm. 

Head, excluding the mandibles, a little longer than broad, subrectangular, 
slightly broader behind than in front, with acutely pointed posterior corners, 
broadly excavated posterior borders and nearly straight sides. Eyes 
moderately large and convex, at the middle of the sides of the head. Man- 
dibles convex, 6-toothed. Clypeus rather flat, abruptly descending, with 
a median and on each side three lateral ridges, which are scarcely more 
than longitudinal ruge; the anterior border distinctly notched in the 


Feb. | 
1916 


WHEELER — ANTS FROM BORNEO AND LUZON 13 
middle and on each side. Frontal area indistinct; frontal carine long, 
diverging behind and bordering distinct antennal scrobes. These and the 
carine, though as long as the antennal scapes, do not reach the posterior 
corners of the head. Antenne 12-jointed; scapes reaching a little behind 
the eyes; funiculi with a very distinct 3-jointed club, the first joint of which 
is longer than the second, the first and second together equal to the termi- 
nal joint; the first and eighth joints of the remainder of the funiculus as 
long as broad, the intermediate joints distinctly transverse. Thorax 
narrower than the head, broadest through the pronotum, which has acute 
humeral angles and is feebly and evenly convex above. In front it rises 
abruptly from the neck, and is sharply marginate anteriorly and down 
each side to the insertions of the fore coxe. There is a very distinct meso- 
epinotal constriction, and the 
epinotum is small and unarmed, 

rounded in profile, without dis- eet 
tinct base and declivity and with- A 

out lamellate metasternal angles. 
Petiole cylindrical, seen from 
above nearly twice as long as 
broad, with straight parallel sides, 
in profile without a node, slightly 
convex above, its ventral surface 


in front with a stout tooth. Post- Figure 2.— Dilobocondyla borneensis sp. 
petiole about one and one third nov. Head and pronotum of worker in 
times as long as broad, slightly profile. 


broader than the petiole, broader 

behind than in front, with a distinct node above, highest posteriorly. 
Gaster nearly circular, flattened dorso-ventrally, formed almost entirely of 
the first segment. Femora and tibie strongly incrassated. 

Somewhat shining; mandibles very coarsely and densely rugose; head 
between the frontal carinze with ten coarse, equidistant, longitudinal ruge, 
the spaces between which on the front are opaque and densely punctate, 
behind traversed by cross-ruge. Posterior corners, sides and ventral 
surface of head very coarsely reticulate-rugose, with shining spaces between 
the rugee. Antennal scrobes in front with three transverse ruge, behind 
densely punctate. Thorax, petiole and postpetiole very coarsely reticu- 
late-rugose, like the back of the head; mesopleure and sides of the epi- 
notum coarsely longitudinally rugose. Gaster and fore coxe subopaque, 
densely punctate, the former also with short radiating ruge at the extreme 
base. Legs shining, the femora with small, scattered, piligerous punctures, 
the tibiz very finely longitudinally striated. 

Whole body covered with erect, delicate but blunt, whitish hairs; pu- 
bescence absent. 

Brownish black; mandibles, except their teeth, antennal scapes, base of 
funiculi, trochanters and terminal tarsal joints, reddish brown. 


14 WHEELER— ANTS FROM BORNEO AND LUZON F SOE 


Described from a single specimen taken by Mr. John Hewitt on Bongo 
Mountain, Sarawak, Borneo. 


This species seems to be very close to the type of the genus, 
D. selebensis Emery of Celebes, which, however, is based on a 
female specimen. It differs from the worker of borneénsis in having 
the antennal scrobes extending to the posterior corners of the head, 
the antennal clava very indistinct and with the penultimate longer 
than the antepenultimate joint, and in lacking the ventral tooth 
of the petiole. From the other known species, D. fouqueti Santschi 
of Tonkin, the Bornean species differs in color and sculpture, in the 
shorter antennal scrobe, convex epinotal declivity, ete. 


Myrmoteras donisthorpei sp. nov. 


Figure 3. 


Female. Length 4.2 mm. 

Head large, including the eyes and excluding the mandibles, as long as 
broad, rather convex above, its short occipital portion about half as broad 
as the diameter through the eyes, separated from the higher anterior 
portion by a deep transverse groove; posterior corners of anterior portion 
prominent and angular. Eyes very large and convex, reniform; cheeks 
very short; ocelli very small. Mandibles much longer than the head, 
linear, parallel, flattened, their outer margins very feebly convex, their 
inner margins straight, dentate throughout, each mandible bearing four- 
teen teeth. The teeth on the basal two thirds of the margin are small, 
equidistant, gradually increasing in length distally towards the apical 
third which bears four long, equidistant teeth, alternating with small 
teeth, the penultimate tooth being acute and very small. Clypeus as long 
as broad, flattened and bilobed in front, convex and subcarinate behind 
in the middle. Frontal area distinct, triangular; frontal groove pro- 
nounced as far back as the anterior ocellus; frontal carinz small, vesti- 
gial, far apart. Antenns very slender, 12-jointed; scapes extending fully 
one fourth their length beyond the posterior border of the head; funi- 
culi filiform, not enlarged at the tip, all the joimts more than twice as long 
as broad; terminal joint slightly longer than the two preceding joints 
together. Thorax small, much narrower than the head; mesonotum con- 
vex in front, rising well above the pronotum, flattened behind, about as 
long as broad; epinotum as long as broad, in profile higher than long, its 
base and declivity subequal, meeting at a rounded obtuse angle. Petiole 


Feb. “al 
1916 


WHEELER— ANTS FROM BORNEO AND LUZON 15 
from above longer than broad, with the node situated at its middle, trans- 
verse, bluntly rounded above, somewhat compressed anteroposteriorly, 
its anterior surface in profile perpendicular, its posterior surface more 
sloping. Gaster small, broadly and regularly elliptical, formed very 
largely of the first segment (but not quite so large as in the figure). Legs 
long and slender, middle and hind tibiz peculiarly incrassated and fusi- 
form, attenuated basally. Wings short and rather narrow; anterior pair 


Figure 3.— Myrmoleras donisthorpei sp. nov. a, Female, dorsal view; 6, petiole of 
same in profile. 


with the radial cell closed, one cubital and a small discal cell, and the distal 
segment of the cubital vein absent except at its origin. Hind wings with 
much reduced venation. 

Surface of body shining; mandibles smooth and impunctate; head, ex- 
cept the occiput, finely and densely rugulose, the rugze on the front longitu- 
dinal. Thorax more cr less rugulose, the pronotum finely and transversely, 
the base of the epinotum coarsely and transversely, the mesopleure finely 
and longitudinally, the mesonotum finely and obscurely longitudinally, 
punctate-rugulose. Petiole, gaster and legs smooth and shining. 

Hairs white, delicate, rather long, sparse, erect, evenly distributed on the 
body, legs and scapes. 


16 WHEELER— ANTS FROM BORNEO AND LUZON [Pe 


Castaneous; head somewhat paler and more reddish; mandibles and 
femora honey-yellow; antenne, fore tibix, tarsi and tips of femora yellow- 
ish brown, the dilated middle and hind tibize darker brown. Wings brown- 
ish hyaline, with brown veins and apterostigma. 

Described from a single specimen taken by Mr. G. E. Bryant on Mt. 
Matang, West Sarawak, Borneo, and sent me by my friend Mr. Horace 
Donisthorpe. 


This species is very distinct from the only other known member 
of the genus, M. binghami. Forel from the Thaungyin Valley, 
Tenasserim, as I find by comparison with a cotype kindly given me 
by Prof. Forel several years ago. The Bornean specimen can 
hardly be the hitherto unknown female of binghamz, as the worker 
of the latter is larger (5 mm.), has only eleven mandibular teeth, 
with two minute denticles between the penultimate and terminal 
long teeth, the legs are decidedly longer, the middle and hind tibize 
are much less incrassated, the clypeus is of a very different shape, 
the surface of the body is much smoother and the color much paler. 


Dimorphomyrmex luzonensis sp. nov. 


Figure 4. 


Female. Length about 8.5 mm. 

Body slender; head oblong, excluding the mandibles, a little more 
than one and one half times as long as broad, as broad in front as behind, 
but distinctly narrowed in the middle, with nearly straight posterior border 
and convex cheeks; in profile nearly two and one half times as long as high, 
flattened above and below. Mandibles convex above and on the sides, 
with six coarse teeth. Clypeus broad, extending to the lateral borders of 
the head, with a flat median and two convex lateral portions; the former 
not projecting as far forward as the latter. Frontal area and groove dis- 
tinct, the former large and triangular, the latter extending to the anterior 
ocellus. Frontal carine straight, diverging behind, more than twice as 
far apart as the distance of each from the lateral border of the head, and 
extending to the middle of the anterior orbits. Eyes large, nearly one third 
as long as the head, a little further from the anterior border of the clypeus 
than from the occipital border of the head, subelliptical, with slightly 
concave medial and convex lateral orbits. Ocelli well developed, situated 
very far forward so that the posterior pair are nearly on a line connecting 


Pep 4°] = WHEELER— ANTS FROM BORNEO AND LUZON 17 


1916 


the posterior ends of the compound eyes. Antenne small, 10-jointed; 
scapes distinctly dilated and flattened at their tips, which reach to about 
the posterior third of the eyes; first funicular joint about twice as long as 
broad, joints 2-8 slightly longer than broad, terminal joint twice as long 
as broad (slightly longer and more pointed than in the figure). Thorax 
elongate elliptical, nearly two and one half times as long as broad, flattened 
above; pronotum broader than long, mesonotum as long as broad, the 
promesonotal suture semicircular. Epinotum long and low, with indistinet 


= 


Yt 

NY 

Figure 4.— Dimorphomyrmezx luzonensis sp. nov. a, Female, in profile; b, head of 
same, dorsal! view. 


base and declivity, the former longer and passing over into the latter very 
gradually. Petiole scarcely broader than long, much narrower than the 
epinotum, the node very thick, low and evenly convex and rounded above. 
Gaster more than twice as long as broad, somewhat compressed dorso- 
ventrally. Legs short and stout; femora broad, slightly compressed; 
middle and hind tibiz with very short spurs. Claws of tarsi well developed. 
Fore wings with a closed radial cell, a single cubital and small but well 
developed discal cell and a large apterostigma. 


18 WHEELER — ANTS FROM BORNEO AND LUZON [PGES 


Surface smooth and shining; mandibles covered with coarse, elongate 
punctures; median portion of clypeus, cheeks and front longitudinally 
striated. Thorax very delicately, gaster a little more coarsely, shagreened 
and covered with minute, scattered punctures. 

Hairs yellowish, very short, almost lacking on the body, except on the 
venter; abundant, stiff and blunt on the mandibles, clypeus and cheeks; 
tibize with minute, dilute appressed hairs or pubescence. 

Yellow; mandibles, a round spot on the ocellar region, a transverse, 
crescentic blotch occupying the dise of the pronotum, and each of the 
gastric segments, except its basal and apical border, castaneous. Wings 
uniformly tinged with brownish yellow, with clear, brown veins and aptero- 
stigma. 

Described from a single specimen taken by Prof. C. F. Baker on Mt. 
Makiling, Luzon Island, Philippines. 


The three previously known species of Dimorphomyrmez, viz. 
D. theryi Emery and mayri Wheeler of the Baltic Amber and 
D. janeti Ern. André of Borneo, are known only from worker speci- 
mens. These have 8-jointed antenne. Although the female 
above described has 10-jointed antenne, I believe that it must 
belong to the same genus. We should, in fact, expect the worker 
and female of Dimorphomyrmez to differ in the number of antennal 
joints, especially as André found nine joints in one of his specimens 
of D. janeti. It is even possible that D. luzonensis may be the 
female of André’s species. The shape of the body and the peculiar 
sculpture and pilosity of the anterior portion of the head in this 
phase, so like the conditions in certain species of Colobopsis and 
Aphomomyrmex, indicate very clearly that the colonies of Dimor- 
phomyrmex are small and inhabit hollow twigs. Collectors in 
Borneo and the Philippines should make diligent search in these 
objects for the missing phases of the two surviving species of this 
singular archaic genus. 


\iaa's = 


4 


Marcz 8, 1916 Vot. VI, pp. 19-22 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 


NEW AMPHIBIANS AND A NEW REPTILE FROM 
SARAWAK. 


BY THOMAS BARBOUR AND GLADWYN KINGSLEY NOBLE. 


Frew Americans have journeyed as extensively and intelligently 
in Upper Borneo as has Prof. Harrison W. Smith (Harvard, 1895). 
A facile knowledge of the Malay and Dyak idioms and the friend- 
ship and respect of European residents, have made him a welcome 
sojourner in the land, and he would, we are sure, have us convey 
his thanks for many courtesies to His Highness The Radja, to 
Capt. J. C. Moulton, formerly Curator of the Kuching Museum 
but now with his regiment in India, and to many other helpful 
friends. A few years ago (1912) Smith returned with a beautifully 
preserved collection containing, among others, such rarities as 
Lanthanotus, Calophrynus, and Microhyla leucostigma, but because 
of his plans to return again to Borneo no report was made upon 
the material. This year he has given to the Museum of Compara- 
tive Zoélogy, besides an excellent series of mammals, birds and 
insects, a far larger collection of reptiles and amphibians taken 
principally in the zodlogically wholly unknown region about the 
Limbang and Madalam River districts and near Mount Mulu in 
northern central Sarawak. Since during the last few years Borneo 


20 BARBOUR AND NOBLE — NEW FROGS AND A NEW LIZARD |? ye4j- 


has become a really well-known area zodlogically, we do not offer 
a list of all Smith’s booty, but confine ourselves to description of 
the new forms. The discovery of another new genus of Dysco- 
phiid frogs is in a way perhaps not surprising, but it is a striking 
suggestion of the fact that there are possibly a host of these beauti- 
ful but retiring creatures still to be found in the East Indies. It 
is worth while drawing attention to the rarity in museums of 
specimens of the Dyscophiid genera already known. ‘The little 
Calliglutus described here is one of the most lovely and delicately 
colored amphibians which has yet been found. 


Calliglutus! gen. nov. Dyscophiidarum. 


Pupil round (but possibly only dilated from the horizontal); tongue 
large, oval, entire and free behind, slightly 
recurved on its posterior margin, but not 
forming a definite pocket as in the genus 
Calpoglossus (Boulenger, Ann. Mag. Nat. 
Hist., 7, 13, 1904, p. 42, pl. 11); palatine 
teeth forming a long transverse series, 
very narrowly interrupted in the middle; 
tympanum hidden; fingers free; toes 
slightly webbed at the base, the tips not 
dilated; coracoids strong; precoracoids 
and clavicles absent, no omosternum, 
metasternum bilobate (see figure 1); sa- 
cral diapophyses moderately dilated. 

This genus is closely related to Colpoglossus, Boul. (loc. cit.), from which 
it differs in the form of its pupil, tongue and pectoral girdle. 


Figure 1. 


Calliglutus smithi sp. nov. 


Type, no. 3797, Museum of Comparative Zodélogy, from the Limbang 
River district, northern central Sarawak, Borneo, between January and 
March, 1915, H. W. Smith. Paratype, M. C. Z., no. 3798. 

Description of the type-— Habit very stout; snout rounded, depressed; 
no definite canthus rostralis; nostrils almost on the end of the snout; 
eyes converging anteriorly, the interorbital space anteriorly about three 


1 xaos beautiful, yAourds rump. 


March 8 


i916 | BARBOUR AND NOBLE — NEW FROGS AND A NEW LIZARD 21 


times the width of the upper eyelids; fingers short, not dilated, first shorter 


than the second; subarticular tubercles only slightly 
enlarged; no metacarpal tubercles; toes short, slightly 
dilated, with a very short basal web, (see figure 
2), subarticular tubercles slightly distinct, a large 
inner metatarsal tubercle; the tibio-tarsal articulation 
reaches the anterior border of the eye; skin of the 
entire body smooth. 

Color.— Ground color above, dark brownish gray; 
symmetrically marked on each side with a curious 
design of black blotches, each blotch edged with pink- 
ish; the most striking features being the black marks 
on the tympanic and femoral regions and the sealing- 
wax red -shaped spot just above the anus; sides and 
throat region washed with light brown and stippled 
with white; belly and thighs white. 


Remarks.— Two specimens, both adults, were 
secured. Smith tells us that when one of his 


Figure 2. 


Dyak helpers caught these two frogs he was greatly excited and 


said that he had never seen anything like them before. 


He caught 


them in a hole under either a stone or a fallen tree trunk, but of 


the exact situation Prof. Smith is not sure. 


Rana laterimaculata sp. nov. 


Type, no. 3811, Museum of Comparative Zoélogy, from 
Sadong, Sarawak, Borneo, collected by Prof. Harrison W. 
Smith in 1912. 

Description of the type— Vomerine teeth in two small 
oblique groups, converging posteriorly and not extending 
behind the posterior margin of the choanae; anterior end 
of each series very slightly posterior to the anterior margin 
of a choana; posterior ends of the series separated from 
each other by a distance slightly greater than the diameter 
of one of the choanae; nostrils much nearer to tip of snout 
than to eye; interorbital space slightly greater than upper 
eyelid; snout concave above, canthus rostralis distinct but 
rounded, loreal region very concave; tympanum circular, 
over one half the diameter of the eye, its distance from 
the latter not over one third of its own diameter; fingers 
long and tapering, not expanded distally, first extending 
far beyond the second; toes almost free, long, slender, 


Figure 3. 


with very small web (see figure 3); outer metatarsal tubercle oblong, equal 


22 BARBOUR AND NOBLE — NEW FROGS AND A NEW LIZARD [Pa 


in length to the inner; tibio-tarsal articulations reach tip of snout when 
hind limbs are bent forward; and overlap considerably when they are 
bent at right angles to axis of body; skin shagreened above, with numerous 
slightly enlarged tubercles scattered over the whole dorsum; no glandular 
ridges nor dorso-lateral fold; skin underneath wholly smooth except on 
posterior aspects of the thighs, where it is finely granular. 

Color.— Light umber above, with indistinct darker marblings; tym- 
panum almost black; very dark brown spots on the sides; anterior aspects 
of thighs spotted; a narrow light line along upper lip from posterior border 
of tympanum to beneath the centre of the eye; lower lip dark brown with a 
few light spots; lower surfaces uniform dirty yellowish brown. 


Dasia moultonii sp. nov. 


Type, no. 11,203, Museum of Comparative Zoélogy, from Sadong, Sara- 
wak, Borneo, collected by Prof. Harrison W. Smith in 1912. 

Description of type.— Rostral large, separated from the frontonasal, the 
portion visible from above nearly as large as the latter shield; a pair of 
supranasals in broad contact with each other; nostril in the center of a 
single shield, nearly dividing it; a very small postnasal; frontonasal sepa- 
rated from the frontal, broader than long; prefrontals hexagonal, in con- 
tact with each other; anterior loreal in contact with the second supra- 
labial, supranasal, frontonasal and prefrontal; frontal about as long as its 
distance from the tip of the snout, slightly shorter than the length of the 
frontoparietals and interparietals together, in contact with the first, second 
and third supraoculars; four supraoculars, none greatly enlarged; a pair 
of frontoparietals, together equaling about the area of the interparietal; 
a pair of large parietals (these are the largest scales on the top of the 
head); parietals separated from each other by the interparietal, not in 
contact behind it; a single pair of nuchals; lower eyelid scaly; five supra- 
labials, second or third largest; three slightly enlarged temporals on each 
side, ear opening very small, anterior part concealed by a small lobe; 30 
seales around the middle of the body, dorsals and laterals with three very 
strong keels; preanals scarcely enlarged, the middle one largest; hind limb 
stretched forward reaches the elbow, hind limb contained slightly more 
than twice in the distance between the snout and vent; digits flattened at 
the base, the distal part compressed; 17 lamellae under the longest toe; 
tail cylindrical and pointed. 

Color.— Ground color gray-brown, lighter below; a series of dark brown 
cross-bands at regular intervals, starting behind the head and covering the 
rest of the upper surface; under part of the body not marked by these 
cross-bands, the under part of the tail faintly marked. 

Named in honor of J. C. Moulton, Esq., a kind friend to Prof. Smith and, 
through him, to the Museum of Comparative Zodlogy. 


ha Ay 


WAN SO 49/6 


ha 


Marcu 29, 1916 Von. VinPs 23 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 


THE SMALLER MOCKINGBIRD OF THE NORTHERN 
BAHAMAS. 


BY OUTRAM BANGS. 


Tue smaller mockingbird of the more northern Bahama Islands, 
has almost universally been referred to the continental Mimus 
polyglottos polyglottos (Linn.). Ridgway, however, in ‘Birds of 
North and Middle America,’ pointed out that it was somewhat 
different, though he did not name it. The form seems to me to be 
perfectly distinct, and the two Bahama skins in the Museum of 
Comparative Zodlogy cannot be matched by any individual in 
an enormously long series of skins from the continent. 

The bird is not uncommon in several of the northern islands, 
especially Andros and Abaco, but it is said to be very shy and 
difficult to secure, and there are but few specimens in collections. 


Mimus polyglottos delenificus subsp. nov. 


Type, from Mastic Point, Andros Island, adult <7, no. 68,495, M. C. Z., 
collected April 24, 1915, by C. J. Maynard. 

Characters — Similar to Mimus polyglottos polyglottos (Linn.), but 
underparts much whiter; breast, belly and throat white; chest very slightly 
suffused with grayish; ear coverts and sides of face paler and grayer — 
grayish white. Similar also to Mimus polyglottos elegans Sharpe of Inagua, 
but at once distinguished by having the inner web of third rectrix mostly 
dusky, as in M. polyglottos polyglottos. 

Measurements.— No. 68,495, adult &, Andros: wing, 110; tail, 112; 
tarsus, 31.5; culmen, 18 mm. No. 14,977 (Bangs Collection), adult <7, 
Little Abaco: wing, 113; tail, 120; tarsus, 31; culmen, 20 mm. 


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June 28, 1916 j Vout. VI, pp. 25-27 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 


TWO UNDESCRIBED BIRDS FROM THE FALKLAND 
ISLANDS. 


BY WINTHROP SPRAGUE BROOKS. 


AFTER studying the collections made on the Falkland Islands 
from October, 1915, to March, 1916, by the John C. Phillips Expe- 
dition to the Falkland Islands, it has seemed advisable to describe 
the following two birds as distinct. 


Phrygilus malvinarum sp. nov. 


Type.— Unsexed immature specimen in first autumn plumage, no. 70438, 
coll. Museum of Comparative Zodlogy. Port Stephens, West Falkland 
Island, Falkland Islands, collected February 1, 1916, by W. S. Brooks. 
Orig. no. 1330, Phillips Expedition to Falkland Islands. 

Characters— No yellow in the plumage. General color above dark 
brown, irregularly streaked with cinnamon, the feathers having dark brown 
centers with broad cinnamon margins, this color becoming more intense 
and the margin more narrow toward the tips of the feathers. On the 
rump the color is more rufous in appearance, the dark brown centers of the 
feathers becoming smaller; lesser wing-coverts fuscous with whitish mar- 


26 BROOKS — FALKLAND ISLAND BIRDS 


gins; median and greater wing-coverts similar; primaries and secondaries 
similar, but white margins very narrow, and the inner secondaries having 
a slight cinnamon tinge to the margins; two outer tail-feathers white 
except a narrow fuscous area along quills and basal half of the inner web; 
the two feathers next to these have narrow white margins and small white 
areas at the tips of the inner webs; the rest of the tail-feathers are fuscous 
with narrow white margins, widest on the outer webs; crown of head dark 
brown (this is the last trace of the postnatal plumage); on the lores, about 
the base of the bill and sides of the crown, the juvenal plumage can be 
seen, these feathers being dark brown with pale sandy-buff edges, the same 
coloration appearing on the ear-coverts; throat and breast, sides and 
flanks, light buff heavily streaked with dark brown, leaving the belly white 
tinged with a wash of buff; under tail-coverts white. Second, third, and 
fourth primaries emarginate. 
Measurements.— Type: wing, 94; tarsus, 21; culmen, 13 mm. 


I have placed this new form provisionally in the above genus. 
Eventually a series of adults may show that it belongs elsewhere. 

This single immature specimen is the only finch that was taken 
besides Phrygilus melanoderus (Quoy & Gaim.), though I was 
constantly on the alert for Phrygilus xanthogrammus (Gray). 


Anthus phillipsi sp. nov. 


A series of forty-one pipits was secured on the Falkland Islands. 
They show sufficient differences from other members of the genus 
to justify their separation into a distinct insular race. 

It is with keen pleasure that I dedicate this new species to Dr. 
John C. Phillips, under whose generous auspices I had the pleasure 
of studying the birds of the Falkland Islands. 


Type.— Adult male, no. 70,390 Museum of Comparative Zodlogy. Port 
Stanley, East Falkland Island, Falkland Islands, collected October 30, 
1915, by W. 8S. Brooks. Orig. no. 1037, Phillips Expedition to the Falk- 
land Islands. 

Characters.— Averaging decidedly larger throughout than A. correndera 
Vieillot, but similar in coloration except that the breast is less heavily 
spotted and the black lines along sides of the throat are less conspicuous. 


June | 
1916 


BROOKS — FALKLAND ISLAND BIRDS Zh 
The back in phillipsi also averages slightly less dark in color. The 
second, third and fourth primaries are emarginate. 

Measurements— Type, adult male: wing, 81; tail, 61; tarsus, 23; cul- 
men, 13 mm. 

Below are the measurements in millimeters of eight adult males from 
the Falkland Islands. The measurements of the females are similar, but 
smaller. 


M. C. Z. no. Orig. no. Wing Tail Tarsus Culmen 
Ad. o 70,391 1284 82.0 62.0 24.0 12.0 
Ad. o& 70,392 1200 2.5 62.5 24.0 12.5 
Ad. o 70,393 1282 82.0 61.0 24.0 12.5 
Ad. & 70,394 1021 82.0 O9ED 25.0 12.5 
Ad. of 70,395 1239 80.0 60.5 24.5 120 
Ad. co 70,396 1022 80.0 60.5 23.5 12.0 
Ad. & 70,397 1023 80.5 61.0 23.5 PALS 
Ad. o& 70,398 1278 80.5 61.0 24.5 13.0 


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OcToBER 18, 1916 Vout. VI, pp. 29-35 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 


TWO NEW ANTS FROM TEXAS AND ARIZONA. 


BY WILLIAM MORTON WHEELER. 


Tue two peculiar Myrmicine ants described in the following 
pages, like so many other species of the same genera, are properly 
neotropical, but as they were taken within our boundaries, we must 
include them in the fauna of the United States. The Phezdole 
has evidently strayed from the tierra caliente of Eastern Mexico, 
the Cryptocerus from the Mexican highlands. The former is most 
closely related to a species known only from Guatemala and Costa 
Rica, the latter to one known only from the State of Morelos. 


Pheidole ridicula sp. nov. 


Soldier (fig.1,aandb). Length about 5 mm. 

Closely related to Ph. absurda Forel. Head very large (nearly 2.5 
mm. long), one and one half times as long as broad, distinctly broader 
at the anterior border than behind, with concave cheeks, straight sides, 
deeply and angularly excised posterior border, flattened dorsal and slightly 
convex gular surface. Mentum without teeth. Occipital groove deep, 
continued forward nearly to the frontal area and terminating in a small 
ocellus-like pit. Eyes small, rather flat, a little behind the anterior fifth 
of the head. Mandibles very convex. Clypeus very short, ecarinate, 


a 


30 WHEELER — TWO NEW ANTS bee 


flattened, its anterior border very feebly and broadly sinuate in the middle. 
Frontal area rather deep, triangular, with a median carinula. Frontal 
carinz short, subparallel. Antenne very short, the scapes reaching the 
lateral borders of the head a little behind the eyes, funicular joints 2-8 
distinctly longer than broad, club shorter than the remainder of the funi- 
culus. Thorax small, through the pronotum about half as broad as the 


Figure 1.—a, Pheidole ridicula sp. nov., soldier in profile; 6, head of same from 
above; c, Pheidole absurda Forel, head of soldier from above. 


head. The pronotum is feebly convex and sloping in front, straight and 
transverse above, with rather prominent but rounded humeri and perpen- 
dicular sides. Promesonotal suture distinct, somewhat impressed on each 
side. Mesonotum sloping, straight in profile, without torus or transverse 
impression, behind more abruptly falling to the deep and rather broad 


mia | WHEELER — TWO NEW ANTS 31 


mesoépinotal constriction. Epinotum small, as long as broad, a litle 
more than two thirds as broad as the pronotum, with two small, slender, 
erect, pointed spines, about as long as broad at their bases, and directed 
upward and outward but not backward. The surface between them is 
concave and sloping, without a distinct angle between the epinotal base 
and declivity, bordered laterally by sharp ridges which run into the bases 
of the spines posteriorly. Petiole less than one and one half times as long 
as broad, slightly broader behind than in front, with rather straight sides. 
The node is entire and rather blunt at the summit, and in profile has a long, 
concave anterior, and short, abrupt posterior, slope. Postpetiole nearly 
one and one half times as broad as the petiole, and about one and one half 
times as broad as long, with bluntly angular sides. Gaster much smaller 
than the head, broadly elliptical, somewhat flattened. Legs rather long, 
femora somewhat incrassated. 

Smooth and shining, covered with sparse, piligerous punctures, which 
are most distinct on the head. Posterior border of clypeus, antennal fovese 
and space between the frontal carinz, finely and sharply longitudinally 
rugose. Mesonotum behind, epinotum and petiole, more opaque and finely 
punctate, rugulose-punctate on the sides. 

Hairs fulvous, erect, rather long, uneven, pointed, moderately abundant, 
covering the whole body, the legs and antenne, longest on the thorax, 
pedicel and gaster. Pubescence absent. 

Brownish ferruginous; head paler and more reddish; mandibles, cly- 
peus, frontal area, gaster and a very faint cloud on the middle of the head, 
reddish castaneous; legs more yellowish; antennal scapes not darker than 
the funicull. 

Described from a single specimen taken by Mr. C. L. Scott at Browns- 
ville, Texas. I have also seen two soldiers of this species from San Diego, 
Texas, in the Pergande Collection of the U.S. National Museum. 


This species is easily distinguished from Ph. absurda Forel of 
Central America by its somewhat smaller size, by the shape of the 
head (compare fig. 1, 6 and ce) and pronotum. In absurda the 
upper surface of the pronotum, when seen from the front, is not 
straight and transverse but convex and rounded. This form also 
has blunt but distinct teeth on the mentum, the gula is more con- 
vex, the petiolar node is distinctly sharper and more compressed 
antero-posteriorly, the sides of the postpetiole are more rounded, 
the epinotal spines are longer, blunter and more erect, that is, less 
deflected laterally, the antennal scapes are black, and the body, and 
especially the gaster, are much paler and more yellowish. None of 
these differences is, perhaps, great enough to prevent one from 


Paes ZC. 


32 WHEELER — TWO NEW ANTS Vol. VI 


regarding ridicula as an extreme subspecies of absurda. I have 
compared the new form with a paratype of absurda, kindly given me 
by Prof. Emery, and with numerous specimens of the same species 
which I took some years ago in the neighborhood of Cartago, Costa 
Rica. The nests of these ants were under flat stones in rather 
moist, clayey soil, and contained numerous garnered seeds of her- 
baceous plants, showing that absurda is a harvester. The habits of 
Ph. ridicula are undoubtedly the same. 


Cryptocerus (Cyathocephalus) rohweri sp. nov. 


Soldier (fig. 2, a). Length 6 mm. 

Closely related to C. wheeleri Forel. Head as broad as long, with rec- 
tangular posterior corners, and surmounted, as in other members of the 
subgenus, by a broadly subcordate, saucer-shaped structure, with emargi- 
nated anterior margin and rather flat floor, feebly convex in the middle. 
Thorax through the pronotum as broad as the head, a little longer than 
broad, the pronotum with acute, subdentate anterior corners and a pro- 
nounced transverse ridge or crest, indistinctly interrupted in the middle, 
the lateral borders crenate, converging behind and not angularly pro- 
duced in front of the mesonotum. Promesonotal suture distinct. Sides 
of mesonotum rounded and convex, but not angulated. Mesoépinotal 
suture distinct. Epinotal spines longer than broad at the base, rather 
acute; epinotal declivity rather abrupt, longer than the base and feebly 
concave. Petiole a little broader than long, each side near the middle with 
a straight, acute, backwardly and outwardly directed spine. Postpetiole 
distinctly broader than the petiole, about twice as broad as long, laterally 
and anteriorly with a pair of straight spines as long as those on the petiole 
and with a similar direction. Gaster oblong-elliptical, with concave ante- 
rior border and without dilated anterolateral ridges or margins. 

Opaque; mandibles densely punctate-rugulose; head, thorax and pedicel 
densely punctate or granulated, the concavity of the cephalic saucer some- 
what shining and with the fine punctures less dense, covered with round 
foveole, except on the sides and declivity of the epinotum and parts of the 
mesopleure. These foveole, which are distinctly shining, are smaller and 
denser on the petiole and postpetiole, larger and uniformly distributed on 
the upper surface of the head and thorax. Gaster very opaque, densely 
granulated, at the base also finely, longitudinally rugulose and with a few 
elongate, shallow foveole. Venter also longitudinally rugulose on its 


Oct. | 


1916 WHEELER — TWO NEW ANTS 33 


anterior half. Legs slightly shining, finely and densely punctate and with 
large, scattered piligerous punctures. 

Hairs sparse, short, obtuse and silvery white, absent on the concavity 
of the cephalic saucer and almost absent on the upper surface of the gaster. 
Only the foveole on the base of the epinotum, and on the upper surface of 
the petiole and postpetiole, contain short appressed hairs. Hairs on the 
legs sparse, erect, similar to those on the body but a little longer. 


Figure 2.— a, Cryptocerus rohweri sp. noy.. soldier, dorsal view; 6, worker of same; 
ce, Cryptocerus wheeleri Forel. soldier; d. worker of same. 


Black; anterior border of cephalic saucer scarcely translucent, dull red- 
dish; extreme tips of antennz, knees and terminal tarsal joints, of the 
same color. 

Worker (fig. 2, b). Length 4.3 mm. 

Head trapezoidal, rather flat above, with the horizontally expanded 
frontal carine rounded in front and very thick, so that they are only slightly 
translucent, the posterior corners bluntly angular, the posterior margin 


poe 
Vol. VI 


34 WHEELER — TWO NEW ANTS 
nearly straight. Clypeus distinct, subtriangular. Thorax narrower than 
the head, longer than broad, broadest through the pronotum, flattened 
above, without pronotal crest, with distinct promesonotal and very indis- 
tinct mesoépinotal sutures. Each side of the pronotum bears a pair of 
subequal acute spines in front and a rectangular tooth behind. Epinotum 
with a pair of spines as long as those at the anterior corners of the pronotum. 
Petiole and postpetiole similar to those of the soldier but of more nearly 
equal breadth, and the postpetiole is proportionally longer. Gaster regu- 
larly elliptical, like that of the soldier, without anterolateral ridges. 

Sculpture like that of the soldier, but the foveole on the head and thorax 
smaller, the thoracic dorsum, mesopleure and sides of epinotum also 
coarsely longitudinally rugose, and the gaster finely longitudinally rugose 
over its whole surface. 

Erect, obtuse, silvery white hairs more abundant than in the soldier, 
and present also on the upper surface of the head and gaster. The silvery 
appressed hairs are longer and more conspicuous, and occur in the foveol 
over the whole dorsal surface as well as on the petiole and postpetiole. 

Color like that of the soldier. The expanded frontal carine are deep 
reddish, as are also the tips of the antenne, the mandibles, tips of tibixe 
and the terminal tarsal joints. 

Described from two soldiers and two workers received from Mr. S. A. 
Rohwer. These and a series of cotypes in the National Museum were taken 
by Mr. Chrisman in Buckman Canyon, Santa Catalina Mountains, Ari- 
zona. Mr. Rohwer writes me that the ants were found ‘‘in galleries exca- 
vated at the base of dead limbs and against the green wood of palo verde 
(Cercidium torreyanum). Mr. Chrisman states that these ants are quite 
common in that vicinity, always occurring in galleries in this tree.’ 


C. rohwert can be readily distinguished from C. wheelert, which I 
found many years ago nesting in epiphytes (Tvllandsia) near 
Cuernavaca, Mexico, by its somewhat larger size (the soldier of 
wheelert measures only 5—5.5 mm., the worker only 3.2-3.6 mm.), 
and by several peculiarities of structure, sculpture, pilosity and 
color. Most of the structural differences will be apparent from a 
comparison of the figures (fig. 2, a—d). In the soldier of wheeleri 
(fig. 2, c) the border of the cephalic saucer is much lower laterally 
and posteriorly than in rohweri, but the anterior translucent portion 
is somewhat more extensive, and the top of the head forming the 
floor of this structure is flattened behind and transversely convex 
in front. The pronotal crest is more distinctly interrupted in the 
middle, the surface of the body and especially of the gaster is dis- 


Oct. | 


en WHEELER — TWO NEW ANTS 35 


tinctly smoother and more shining, and the foveole are smaller 
and sparser on the head, thorax and pedicel. In the worker 
wheeleri (fig. 2, d), besides the structural differences shown in the 
figures, the mesoépinotal suture is seen to be obsolete, the expanded 
frontal carine are larger, thinner and whitish yellow, and the an- 
tenn, knees, tibis: and tarsi are red. The foveole of the head 
have appressed silvery hairs like those on the thorax and pedicel, 
and the erect hairs are much longer and more conspicuous than in 
the worker rohwert. 

Besides C’. rohweri only two species of Cryptocerus are known to 
cross the southern boundary of the United States, C. varians F. 
Smith, which occurs on the southern tip of Florida, and C. texanus, 
recently described by Santschi from Texas, without precise locality. 
Of this form I have long had specimens taken by Mr. Charles 
Schaeffer at Brownsville, Texas, but I referred them to C. angulosus 
Mayr, under which name they are cited in my ant book. 


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NoveMBER 23, 1916. Vou. VI, pe. 37-38 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 
I BSS 
A NEW SWIFT FROM SANTO DOMINGO. 


BY JAMES LEE PETERS. 


WHILE engaged in studying a collection of birds which I made 
during the winter and spring of 1916 in Santo Domingo for the 
Museum of Comparative Zoélogy, I have noted certain differences 
in the large resident collared swift of the Island, that render a 
separation necessary. The form may therefore be known as 


Streptoprocne zonaris melanotis subsp. nov. 


Type, no. 70,116, coll. Museum of Comparative Zodlogy, adult male, 
Sostia, Santo Domingo, February 28, 1916, collected by James L. Peters 
(orig. no. 759). 

Similar to Streptoprocne zonaris pallidifrons (Hartert), but auricular 
and orbital regions and sides of head much blacker, less sooty. 

Specimens of Streptoprocne zonaris from the Greater Antilles vary so in 
size, that I have been unable to establish any differences on that basis. 


38 PETERS — SANTO DOMINGO SWIFT 


MEASUREMENTS (in millimeters). 


M.C.Z. no. Sex Wing Tail Bill Tarsus 
70,114 on 207 78 8.3 20.0 
70,115 J 189 4 9.0 21.0 
70,116 oo (type) 193 74 9.2 20.4 ¢ 
70,117 2) 194 68 9.6 21.0 


While the series examined in this connection is not large, the 
much blacker color of the sides of the head in birds from Santo 
Domingo is very striking, as compared with Cuban and Jamaican 
birds of the same sex and taken at the same season. 


/4, 299 


DrcpmBer 5, 1916 Vou. VI, pr. 39-50 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 


NEW AMERICAN SPHINGIDAE. 


BY BENJAMIN PRESTON CLARK. 


Ir is with considerable hesitation that an amateur in entomology 
ventures to describe what he believes to be new forms in the insect 
world. One, however, who has been able in middle life to take up 
seriously the study of but one family of lepidoptera, the Sphingidae, 
and to fulfil a scientific desire which has remained unsatisfied for 
over thirty years, has a pardonable keenness of interest in the 
subject. This leads him to desire to make any contribution how- 
ever small to the better knowledge of a group, which in its variety 
and beauty as well as in its wide distribution, is preéminent. Any 
new observations to be of value should be given permanent form; 
and it is for this reason that I have wished to preserve the record 
of several American forms which appear to be new, either specifi- 
eally or subspecifically. 

In this connection I cannot refrain from expressing my great 
appreciation of the cordial weleome which has been given me by 
lepidopterists both in this country and abroad. ‘To state my 
thanks for all the courtesies and kindnesses extended to me would 


40 CLARK —NEW AMERICAN SPHINGIDAE gee 


be to give a list of my many friends in the entomological world. 
A few, however, I must speak of. It was due to the encourage- 
ment first given me by my friends William Schaus, Andrey N. 
Avinoff, Dr. William Barnes and Dr. J. McDunnough, that I have 
had the courage to attempt the description of new forms. The 
officials of all the great American museums have given me every 
facility in the study of their collections and in the exchange of 
specimens. I wish to acknowledge the many courtesies of the 
American Museum, the Brooklyn Institute, the California Acad- 
emy, the Carnegie Institute, the Field Museum of Chicago, the 
Museum of Comparative Zoédlogy, the National Museum, and the 
Philadelphia Academy. Especially are my thanks due to Dr. 
William J. Holland, Dr. Frank E. Lutz, Mr. Frank E. Watson, 
Mr. Jacob Doll, Mr. Samuel Henshaw, Dr. Henry Skinner, Prof. 
Charles B. Cory, Mr. William J. Gerhard, and Mr. William C. 
Wood, all good friends of mine, for their assistance and instruction 
in many ways where I have needed help. 

I am indebted to Rev. A. Miles Moss of Para, Brazil, for the 
opportunity of knowing something of the larval life of the South 
American Sphingidae, a subject in which his knowledge is so 
remarkable. From across the water, Dr. Karl Jordan, Mr. Paul 
Dognin, and Mr. Charles Oberthur have given me their cordial 
assistance and have been patient with my ignorance. Any refer- 
ence to the Sphingidae would be incomplete which did not again 
say that the lasting thanks of all lepidopterists are due to Dr. 
Walter Rothschild and Dr. Karl Jordan for their wonderful ‘Re- 
vision’ of that family, which has placed its classification on the 
modern scientific basis of structural differences. 

It is highly probable that mistakes will be found in my observa- 
tions; for these I alone am responsible; while for whatever sum 
total of value and accuracy my descriptions may have, my thanks 
are due to those who have so greatly helped me. I am only giving 
an experience which must have been shared by many others when 
I say that the pleasure of coming to count as friends so many men 
of rare personal charm, as well as of great scientific knowledge, and 
of codperating with them to the extent of my ability, has given an 
added happiness to a pursuit sufficiently fascinating in itself. 


wis | CLARK—NEW AMERICAN SPHINGIDAE 41 


Protoparce brontes haitiensis subsp. nov. 
Plate IV, figures 1, 2. 


Al. ant. long., o', 45 mm.; 9, 50 mm. Al. ant. lat., #7, 20 mm; 
9,22mm. Marg. ext., o, 27 mm.; 9, 29 mm. 

Locality.— Port au Prince, Haiti. One male and one female taken by 
Dr. W. M. Mann in December, 19138, and given to the writer. 

This form appears to be intermediate between the Cuban and the 
Jamaican subspecies, but closer to the latter. It is in size larger than a 
measured series of P. cubensis, and differing but slightly in this particular 
from P. brontes. The black lines of the upper side of the fore wing are in 
both sexes slightly, if at all, more prominent than in brontes, and much 
less conspicuous than in cubensis, The general tone of the fore wing being 
darker than in brontes, the effect produced is of a more uniform coloration 
of the fore wing than in that subspecies. This is especially marked in 
the male. The post-discal interspace and the streak before SM2, on upper 
side of fore wing in the male, are in the Haitien form of the same gray 
color as the rest of the wing, not buff or pinkish buff as in brontes. The 
mesothoracic tegula in the female is as white as in brontes, but the sub- 
basal and distal areas of the fore wing above and the anal area of the hind 
wing, are darker, and closer in tint to cubensis. 


More Haitien material would be desirable, but as this is difficult 
to obtain, it seems worth while to note the differences in the pair 
in the collection of the writer. 


Protoparce afflicta bahamensis subsp. nov. 
Plate III, figure 2. 


Habitat— Nassau, New Providence Island, West Indies. One male in 
the collection of B. Preston Clark was taken by Mr. George P. Engelhardt 
of the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences, and given by him to the 
writer. 

In the ‘Revision’ it is suggested that more material is necessary to 
determine whether the insular and continental specimens of Protoparce 


42 CLARK —NEW AMERICAN SPHINGIDAE Pe 


afficta exhibit any constant differences. From comparison of one male 
taken at Nassau, with a long series from Cuba and South America, it 
appears that there is a real difference between the race of the Bahamas 
and specimens from both the other localities. In the Nassau specimen the 
upper side of the fore wing is much more variegated. The ground tone is 
lighter; and the markings, besides being darker and heavier, are in general 
coarser. The light bands on the upper side of the hind wing are more 
prominent than in the typical form, and the outer band is really white 
toward the anal angle, and along this angle the white is more extended. 
A white dash, 3 mm. in length, starting on SC5 at a point 4 mm. distant 
from the distal margin, extends diagonally toward R1. The markings on 
the under side of both fore wing and hind wing are much darker and 
heavier, and the submarginal dark band on both wings is broader. The 
hind wing below is lighter in color toward anal angle. 


The general appearance and character of the insect vary so 
markedly from afflicta that, while one would wish to have further 
material, the form appears to deserve a subspecific name. A 
specimen of afflicta from Cuba is reproduced for purposes of com- 
parison (Plate III, figure 3). 


Protoparce francisc® sp. nov. 
Plate VI, figures 2, 3. 


Al. ant. long., o', 42-47 mm.; 9,55 mm. AI. ant. lat., «, 17-20 mm.; 
9,21 mm. Marg. ext., o', 24-27 mm.; 9, 30 mm. 

Locality.— Caracas, Venezucla. A series of males and one female in 
the collection of B. Preston Clark, received from Mr. A. J. Carranza Rojas. 

A much whiter species than any other Proloparce except P. leucoptera, 
which in general wing coloring it closely resembles. In the pattern of the 
fore wing, it is like P. florestan. There are, however, the following differ- 
ences. The upper side of the fore wing is white, with light and dark 
brown markings. The two diseal streaks R38-M2 are less distinet, and 
sometimes vestigial. The markings of the fore wing are much lighter in 
color, and there is no greenish tint. The head, thorax and abdomen above 
are brown, with light scales interspersed. The hind wing above is brown 
instead of black, as in P. florestan. It has the same markings but the white 
at the anal angle is more extended, The under side of the fore wing is 


De. 5 CLARK — NEW AMERICAN SPHINGIDAE 45, 


light brown, shading to white. The hind wing below is white, save for the 
light brown median and marginal bands, which are sometimes vestigial. 
The under side of the abdomen is white, with three yellow spots. 

This is a smaller species than P. florestan, the length of the fore wing in 
this latter species in a measured series being 55-60 mm. in the male, and 
55-70 mm. in the female. At first sight specimens of P. francisc@ have a 
faded appearance, but the examination of a considerable series indicates 
no difference between fresh and old specimens. 


Chlenogramma obscura sp. nov. 
Plate III, figure 1. 


Al. ant. long., 9, 46 mm. AI: ant. lat., 9, 19 mm. Marg. ext., 9, 
25mm. Expanse, ?, 100 mm. 

Habitat— Chaco de Santiago del Estero, Rio Salado, Argentina. Re- 
ceived from Mr. E. Le Moult, Paris. 

Palpi brown, first joint white. Head and thorax brown irrorated with 
white, and with a prominent dark brown collar extending backward along 
the sides of the thorax to the mesonotum, the white tufts of which are 
more conspicuous than in Ch. cinerea. Geminate antemedian band in- 
clined obliquely basad back of M2 instead of being angled outward as in 
cinerea. Abdomen above, much worn, but it appears to be dark brown 
with white seales, and with dark brown side spots. Abdomen below brown 
with darker median spots. Fore tarsus with obviously prolonged spines. 

Fore wing, above: Brown irrorated with white, crossed by black lines 
and bands. Pattern similar to cinerea, but a much darker insect. Differs 
from cinerea as follows. Proximal antemedian line stronger. Interspace 
between both black half-moons at R83 and M1 and the postdiseal line are 
blackish, instead of only in front. Dark area between postdiscal line and 
distal margin extending half-way to hinder angle. 

Hind wing, above: The crenate character of the diseal band is much 
less marked, and disappears costad. Ground tone is light brown, whitish 
toward anal angle. 

Underside: Ground tone of both wings dark brown. In the fore wing 
the discal lines are all obscure, and but slightly crenate. In the hind wing 
the discal band outside the cell is broad and dark, not divided; the second 
band is not crenate. 


eas 


44 CLARK — NEW AMERICAN SPHINGIDAE Vol. VI 


Amplypterus gannascus dentoni subsp. nov. 
Plate V, figure 1. 


Al. ant. long., o', 54 mm. Al. ant. lat., o&, 18 mm. Marg. ext., o, 
30 mm. 

Habitat— Chanchamayo, Peru. Two males in coll. B. Preston Clark, 
and given by Mr. William D. Denton, Wellesley, Massachusetts, after 
whom the subspecies is named. 

A lighter-bodied and narrower-winged insect than A. gannascus. The 
general color of fore wings above, anal angle of hind wing, lighter portions 
of head and abdomen, stone-gray shading toward white. Fore wing more 
produced at apex, and outer margin more convex between SC5 and R3. 
Dark spot at back of fore wing toward the outer margin much reduced. 
Lines of fore wing above more prominent, and more variety in the shading. 
A very narrow stone-gray marginal band runs along the entire outer edge 
of the fore wing and continues a short distance beyond the hinder angle. 
The dark sub-basal band, the dark markings of thorax, and the lunulated 
lines from the costal margin, are chestnut in color instead of the olive color 
of the typical form. Black bands of the hind wing broader and more 
confluent than in A. gannascus. A distinguished-looking insect. 


The two males in the collection of the writer have been compared 
with specimens of gannascus from Costa Rica, Peru, Brazil, Colom- 
bia, Venezuela and Mexico, and the above distinctions appear to 


hold good. 


Amplypterus palmeri brasiliensis subsp. nov. 
Plate IV, figure 3. 


Habitat— Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Two males in coll. B. Preston Clark, 
given me by my friend, Mr. Jacob Doll, of the Brooklyn Museum. 

As one compares specimens of A. palmeri from southeastern Brazil with 
those from Peru, Ecuador and western Brazil, there appear to be certain 


enn CLARK — NEW AMERICAN SPHINGIDAE 45 


well-defined differences, largely of color. The head, central portion of the 
thorax, fore wing and abdomen above, are of a yellowish cast, instead of 
the gray of the western form. The red of the hind wing is fainter in color. 
The dark markings on the side of the thorax, the basal, apical and other 
markings (brown) of the fore wing, and the bands of the hind wing are of 
a lighter color than in the western form. The under side of both wings 
is in general lighter. There is no special difference in size, but the form 
from southeastern Brazil seems a duller-colored insect, contrasting rather 
sharply with the brilliancy of the specimens from western South America. 


Orecta fruhstorferi sp. nov. 
Plate V, figure 4. 


Al. ant. long., 7, 34 mm. Al. ant. lat., «1,13 mm. Marg. ext., 7, 
22 mm. 

Locality— Venezuela. One male in coll. B. Preston Clark, given by 
Mr. Jacob Doll, who obtained it from Mr. Fruhstorfer in exchange. 

A more strongly marked and darker-colored species than O. lycidas. 
The markings of both the fore wing and hind wing above are chocolate- 
brown, contrasting strongly with the light brown of the fore wing and the 
reddish brown of the hind wing of lycidas. 

Fore wing, above: The sub-basal spots are inclined more distad than in 
lycidas. Instead of being light brown with a few darker markings, it is 
largely chocolate-brown with a light area along the basal half of the costal 
margin, a triangular spot at the apex, and a submarginal area toward the 
hinder angle between R3 and M2. The stigma is large, black, balloon- 
shaped, with the point toward the costal margin, and 3 mm. in length. A 
very distinct dark brown marginal band, widest at R2 (4 mm.) and crenate 
at the veins within, extends from the apex to the hinder angle. Outer 
margin is slightly crenate at the veins. Ciliae dark brown. 

Hind wing, above: A dark brown sub-anal area, enclosing two trans- 
parent dots, and extending half-way up the anal margin. From this area a 
lunulated band, nearly parallel to the outer margin but trending away from 
it, extends to R1. And from the inner angle of this area a faint line extends 
to the middle of the inner wing margin. Very narrow dark brown marginal 
band. Ciliae white. 

Fore wing, below: Dark yellow in tone. The ash-gray marginal band 
is well marked, as is the stigma. Marginal band loses its crenate character 


46 CLARK — NEW AMERICAN SPHINGIDAE Pe 


below. At the inner margin an obscure light brown band extends in a 
triangular shape between SC4 and SC5, and extending rather broadly to 
apex. Yellow-brown area extending along entire inner margin. 

Hind wing, below: Dark yellow with trace of sub-anal area and dots, 
and the two bands which are narrow and vestigial. 

The abdomen has heavy dark brown bands at the edge of the tergites, 
extending in a lighter form entirely around the under side. Yellow below. 


Nyceryx ericea minor subsp. nov. 
Plate V, figure 5. 


Al. ant. long., co’, 22 mm. 

Locality. — Sta. Catharina, Brazil. One male in coll. B. Preston Clark; 
from the collection of Mr. C. Maxwell Stuart, who obtained it from Dr. 
QO. Staudinger. 

Closely allied to N. ericea, shape and general pattern of both wings being 
similar. 

Fore wing, above: A black streak before middle of SM2, a little toward 
the base. Diagonally from it, and at the inner end but not connecting, a 
similar line runs proximal to inner margin. No dark shade posterior to 
these two lines as in ericea. There is but one pale postdiscal lunule, with 
traces of three more outside the brown curved oblique discal band. A 
black line from SC5 to R2, reappearing again at R38, and continued to 
SM2. Conspicuous apical lunule, but narrower than in ericea. Stigma 
with no white scales, a few lighter brown ones. ‘Tip of wing less incised 
and more truncate than in ericea. 

Hind wing, above: The yellow area contains one small brown spot 
continuous with the costal border toward apical end, and traces of two 
more toward base of area. No whitish bars at anal angle of hind wing, 
their place being taken by a yellow spot. Yellow area of hind wing not 
traversed by a continuous discal band. 

Underside: Burnt umber, tawny rufous scaling vestigial. On fore 
wing only one subapical whitish lunule between SC5 and R1, with traces 
of several more. A dark area containing these lunules runs to a conspicu- 
ous point subapically on SC4. A whitish curved linear mark near hinder 
angle. On hind wing two faint rufous linear sub-anal marks. 

Abdominal sealing more extended red than in N. ericea, but less so than 
in N. nictitans. 


Dec. | 


1916 CLARK—-NEW AMERICAN SPHINGIDAE 47 


Xylophanes mirabilis sp. nov. 
Plate VI, figure 1. 


Al. ant. long., 1, 54 mm. Al. ant. lat., oc’, 20 mm. Marg. ext., <7, 
26 mm. 

Locality.— Antioquia, Colombia. One male in coll. B. Preston Clark. 

Palpi yellow. Head, thorax and abdomen above olive green, the latter 
with white scales along the sides, thickening to a white fringe on the three 
last tergites. Antennae olive green above, red below. 

Wings, upper side: Fore wing olive green like thorax, of color similar to 
X. adalia, with three black patches. One, sub-basal, 2 mm. in diameter; 
the second, longitudinal, beyond apex of cell, 2 mm. wide and 3 mm. in 
length, separated in the middle by the vein R2, and with a black stigma 
at its inner end; the third at hinder margin near the outer angle, 2 mm. 
in length and 1 mm. broad, and running diagonally inward from the hinder 
margin costad. A thin brown line from the outer side of the sub-basal 
patch curves irregularly toward the costal edge, becoming very faint before 
reaching it. The fore wing is crossed by two heavy transverse lines, the 
inner running from midway of the inner margin to a point on the costal 
margin one third the distance from the apex to the base, and slightly in- 
curving below the cell in an S-shape to SC5, at which point it is sharply 
angled basad to the margin. The outer line runs straight from a point on 
the inner margin midway between the inner line and the hinder angle to a 
point half-way between SC5 and the costal margin. Here it divides and 
becomes faint, one division being sharply angled inward to a small black 
subapical dot on costal margin 9 mm. from the apex, while the other 
division runs sharply distad to the apex. Both the inner and outer trans- 
verse lines are accentuated by faint black vein dots. There is a series of 
black submarginal vein dots about 2 mm. from the distal margin, with a 
light blue wavy line basad of them. The ciliae also are dark at the veins. 
Inside the outer transverse line is a narrow light blue line running its whole 
length; while inside the inner transverse line on the inner margin is a light 
blue shade, extending obscurely toward costal margin. 

Hind wing brownish black, with a faint brown submarginal band, and a 
narrow brown marginal band. Also a brown fold at the anal angle. The 
ciliae are pale, and black at the veins, as in the fore wing. 

Under side: Both wings vinaceous brick-red similar in color to X. belti, 
very lightly irrorated with black scales in the outer half. Both wings with 
a green dentate distal border about 4 mm. broad, and wider between the 


48 CLARK — NEW AMERICAN SPHINGIDAE vee VT 


veins. Fore wing with a black S-shaped line from the inner margin to the 
costal margin, duplicating the inner transverse line of the upper side, but 
curving easily, and not sharply angled at SC5. A series of vein dots 
parallel to the outer margin, and distant from it 7 mm., takes the place of 
the outer transverse line of the upper side. Black dot on costal margin 
9 mm. from apex, as on upper side, but smaller. 

Hind wing with a faint median line parallel to the outer margin, and 
sharply angled at SC2, reaching the inner margin midway of its length. 
A series of arrow-shaped vein dots runs parallel to this line midway between 
it and the outer margin. 

The inner margin of the fore wing nearly to the outer angle, a basal spot 
on the fore wing, a fold at the anal angle of the hind wing, the legs, and the 
side tufts of the abdomen are yellow. These latter make a nearly con- 
tinuous line on each side of the abdomen laterally. 


This is a remarkable form, being in its coloration and the trans- 
verse lines of the fore wing allied to the adalia group, and in the 
location of three black spots on the fore wing being affiliated with 
that to which X. ockendeni belongs. 


Xylophanes jordani sp. nov. 
Plate V, figure 3. 


Al. ant. long.,; o', 27 mm. Al. ant. lat., o', 9 mm. Marg. ext., c) 
15 mm. 

Habitat.— Costa Rica. Two males in coll. B. Preston Clark, received 
from Mr. A. H. Fassl, Teplitz, Bohemia. 

Shape of wings and type of coloration like X. thyelia, but pattern entirely 
different. Head, thorax and abdomen above and below of same color as 
in thyelia, except that median dorsal line in the latter is heavier and pink. 

Fore wing, above: Chocolate-brown basal area sharply defined out- 
wardly, extending from the costal margin, at a point about one third the 
distance toward the apex, across the wing to the inner margin. This area 
lighter brown in the folds. Lines 1 to 5 are chocolate-brown. Line 1, 
beginning at SC5, runs in an irregular curve to the inner margin, almost 
meeting there the hinder angle of the dark basal area. Costally of line 1 
is a light brown area extending from the dark basal portion of the wing to 
the apex, with a darker brown median cloud, and irrorated with dark brown 


pa CLARK — NEW AMERICAN SPHINGIDAE 49 


scales. This area is bluntly arrow-shaped at the inner margin, and is a 
marked characteristic of the species. Line 2 is closely parallel to 1, begin- 
ning slightly apically from it on SC5, and uniting with it before reaching 
the inner margin. Lines 3 and 4, united at their beginning on SC5, run 
slightly separated to R3, where they fade to a series of dark dots, reappear- 
ing again at M2, and converging to lines 1 and 2 on inner margin. Line 5, 
broader than 1 to 4, runs from the apex to the inner margin, almost parallel 
to the distal margin; it also becomes lighter from R3 to M2, but continues 
asaline. This partial disappearance of lines 2, 3, 4 and 5, from R3 to M2, 
produces a light brown area similar to that in thyelia, except that the 
reappearance of these lines on M2, gives the effect of a chocolate-brown 
broadly lunar patch extending from the hinder angle of the basal area to the 
hinder angle of the fore wing. Line 6 is lighter brown than the rest, and 
extends from the apex to the hinder angle, being closely marginal. 

Fore wing, below: There are traces of the three or four discal lines of 
thyelia. A broad brown discal area fades away to yellow toward the apex 
and the outer margin. This yellow area is irrorated with black scales, 
and there is a series of large black submarginal patches in it, the first 
apical, the rest between the veins to the hinder angle except between R2 
and M1 where they become a group of irrorated black spots. A small black 
dash on the costal margin 4 mm. from the apex. 

Hind wing, above: Similar to thyelia but dark at anal angle and uni- 
colorous. Below, discal area and anal fold yellow. Marginal area so 
heavily irrorated with black scales as to become practically black. Toward 
the inner edge of this black area three narrow distinct black lines from 
SC2 to M2, parallel to the distal margin. 


This species occurs in Costa Rica in the same localities as does 
thyelia. The sagittate effect produced by the arrangement of the 
lines of the fore wing, in connection with the basal area, is, so far 
as I know, unique in the genus Xylophanes. 

A specimen of X. thyelia from Peru is reproduced for purposes 
of comparison (Plate V, figure 2). 


50 


Figure 
Figure 
Figure 


Figure 
Figure 
Figure 


Figure 
Figure 
Figure 
Figure 
Figure 


Figure 
Figure 
Figure 


ee a 


me 


Ona He GSS 


CLARK —NEW AMERICAN SPHINGIDAE 


DESCRIPTION OF PLATES. 


Puate III. 


Chlenogramma obscura sp. nov. Female. 
Protoparce afflicta bahamensis subsp. nov. Male. 
Protoparce afflicta afflicta Grote. Male. 


Puate LV. 


Protoparce brontes haitiensis subsp. nov. Male. 
Protoparce brontes haitiensis subsp. nov. Female. 


Amplypterus palmeri brasiliensis subsp. nov. Male. 


PLATE V. 


Amplypterus gannascus dentoni subsp. nov. Male. 


Xylophanes thyelia Linné. Male. 
Xylophanes jordani sp. nov. Male. 
Orecta fruhstorferi sp. nov. Male. 
Nyceryx ericea minor subsp. nov. Male. 


PuaTe VI. 


Xylophanes mirabilis sp. nov. Male. 
Protoparce francisce sp. nov. Male. 
Protoparce francisce sp. nov. Female. 


14,263 


JANUARY 13, 1917 Vou. VI, pp. 51-52 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 


TWO NEW WEST INDIAN BIRDS. 


BY THOMAS BARBOUR AND WINTHROP SPRAGUE BROOKS. 


SINCE the appearance of our Ornithology of Cuba is to be some- 
what postponed, owing to the desirability of obtaining certain 
additional material, we have thought it best to put these two 
descriptions upon record now. 


Todus multicolor exilis subsp. nov. 


Type, no. 67,263, coll. Museum of Comparative Zodlogy, adult male, 
Preston, Nipe Bay, Province of Oriente, Cuba, March 5, 1915, collected 
by J. L. Peters. 

Similar to Todus multicolor multicolor of western Cuba and the Island 
of Pines, but having distinctly lighter blue upon the sides of the neck and 
a considerably more restricted and duller yellow patch at the base of the 
forehead. 


Our series of twenty-six examples of Todus from Cuba and the 
Island of Pines shows that these characters are stable and diag- 
nostic. We cannot, however, as yet point out just that area of 
Cuba in which intergradation occurs between these and other 
races characteristic of the eastern and western parts of the island. 


52 BARBOUR AND BROOKS — WEST INDIAN BIRDS Pa 


Petrochelidon fulva cavicola subsp. nov. 


Type, no. 67,675, coll. Museum of Comparative Zodlogy, adult male, 
San Antonio de los Baiios, Province of Havana, Cuba, March 22, 1915, 
collected by T. Barbour, W.S. Brooks and V. J. Rodriguez. 

Similar to Petrochelidon fulva fulva from Santo Domingo, but a little larger 
and differently colored. The Cuban birds show a much greater extension 
of the fulvous area below and a consequent restriction of the white area on 
the belly. In the Cuban birds the throat and chest are usually more richly 
colored than in the individuals of true fulva. They also have the rufescent 
or fulvous area changing gradually into the white or whitish of the mid- 
ventral region, whereas in the Haitian birds the white is clearer and purer 
and the boundary of the fulvous zone is quite sharply defined. 


The Peters collection made in northern Santo Domingo makes it 
possible to compare five examples of true fulva with our series of 
over thirty Cuban birds. In the W. E. D. Scott collection, now 
in the Museum of Comparative Zodlogy, there are fifty-six examples 
of the Jamaican race, poeciloma, which is different from both the 
Cuban and Haitian forms, and is much more similar to the Haitian, 
than to the Cuban bird. This fact is the rule rather than the 
exception with Jamaican types in many different groups. 


HLE59 


Marcu 28, 1917 Vou. VI, pp. 53-56 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 


AN EXTINCT CUBAN CAPROMYS. 


BY GLOVER MORRILL ALLEN. 


In a previous paper (Bull. Mus. Comp. Zoél., Jan. 1917, vol. 
61, pp. 1-12), I described a subfossil insectivore, a Geocapromys, 
and a small species of Boromys, on the basis of cranial fragments 
recovered from a piece of bone-breccia sent from Cuba to the 
Museum of Comparative Zoédlogy by Professor Carlos de la Torre. 
The bone-breccia was found in a limestone cavern in the Sierra 
de Hato Nuevo, Province of Matanzas. This locality has lately 
been revisited by Dr. Thomas Barbour, who collected a quantity 
of subfossil bones from the same cave. He found them in a layer 
a short distance beneath the surface of the floor deposit, and was 
fortunate in discovering several pockets where the bones were 
loose in the earth, and not solidified together by limy deposition. 
The greater part of the deposit had already been removed in the 
course of years by the local planters, who use the cave earth as 
a fertilizer. The original mass must have been considerable, the 
accumulation of a long period of time. The greater part of the 
bones recovered are those of Geocapromys and Capromys pre- 


bo 
Vol. VI - 


54 ALLEN — AN EXTINCT CUBAN CAPROMYS 
hensilis, mainly immature. Their scattered and fragmentary 
condition may be explained in part by the probability that the 
animals from which they came were brought thither by owls, and 
either they were torn apart in the cave or their bones were re- 
gurgitated as owl ‘pellets.’ 

In examining the material brought back from this cave and from 
the Macha cave, near Limones, several jaws of a very small Ca- 
promys were discovered, apparently representing an undescribed 
species which in life could hardly have been much larger than an 
adult house rat. Even the youngest Capromys prehensilis avail- 
able, in which the last lower molar has just reached the tooth-row, 
has much larger and broader teeth, and a longer tooth-row, than 
the old adult of this small species. A young or immature Jaw of 
this genus is easily recognized by the nature of the bony capsule 
surrounding the last molar; it is thin and porous in texture, and 
its outline is rounded. In an adult, however, the bony alveolar 
wall is solid, its posterior edge thickened to form a narrow ledge, 
and produced backward as a vertical keel. This dwarf species 
may be known as 


Capromys nana, sp. nov. 


Type.— A right lower mandible, no. 9864, Mus. Comp. Zodl., from a 
cave deposit in the Sierra de Hato Nuevo, Province of Matanzas, Cuba, 
collected by Thomas Barbour. 

Specific characters— A small species with a tooth-row about two thirds 
the length of that in the adult C. prehensilis, and with proportionally 
narrower teeth; angular process of the jaw, however, relatively shorter 
and broader. 

Description.— The type jaw retains all the teeth, but the coronoid and 
angular processes are broken off. The strikingly narrower and smaller 
teeth, as compared with C. prehensilis, the smallest of the living species, 
and the less massive proportions of the jaw, are characteristic, and are 
well brought out in the measurements given below. The enamel pattern 
of the teeth is essentially similar, except that the anterior point of the 
first molariform tooth is nearly in the axis of the tooth-row instead of 
nearer its inner border. The shape of the angular process is characteristic. 


March cig 


1917 ALLEN 


AN EXTINCT CUBAN CAPROMYS 19) 


It is relatively much broader and flatter in ventral aspect than in C. pre- 
hensilis or in melanurus, with a deep, rounded notch on its inner outline, 
instead of being long and narrow with only a slight indication of a notch. 
In lateral aspect the broad ledge formed by the angular process is wider 
anteriorly, and bounds a deep pocket-like depression, where in other 
species of Capromys the surface shows only a shallow and evenly hollowed 
groove for muscle attachment. The incisors are pure white. 

Measurements— The type measures: alveolar length of tooth-row, 
12.5 mm.; crowns of cheek teeth, 12.2; crown length and breadth of pm, 
3.6 X 2.6; of mi, 3.0 X 3.0; of me, 2.7 X 3.2; of ms, 2.9 X 2.9; diastema, 
10.5; greatest depth from alveolus of pi, 9.0; from back of condyle to 
anterior end of socket of incisor, 35.5; from summit of condyle to ventral 
surface of angular process, 17.0. The lower tooth-row of an adult C. 
prehensilis measures 17.5 mm., and the breadth of the crowns of the molars, 
4.3. 

A fragment of a maxilla referred to this species (no. 9875) shows the 
alveoli of the three anterior teeth. These alveoli measure respectively: 
pm 3.0 K 3.0; pm; 3:0 < 3:0; m?, 3.0 < 2:9 mm. 


Remarks.— The ten jaws examined are all quite similar, and 
agree closely in the small size of the teeth, the relative lightness 
of structure, and the possession of a deeper depression in the outer 
face of the jaw, where the angular process comes off. There can 
be no doubt that they represent adults of a much smaller species 
than any heretofore known. 

It should be recalled here, that Peters, in publishing Poey’s 
description of Capromys melanurus (Monatsb. Kk. Preuss. Akad. 
Berlin, 1864, p. 384) added in a footnote: “Hr. Poey schreibt mir 
noch von einer zweiten neuen Art, C. pallidus, welche sich von 
allen anderen durch ihre geringere Grosse und die blonden, un- 
geringelten Haare unterscheidet.” This probably refers to an 
albinistic form of either melanurus or prehensilis, such as occurs 
not uncommonly with yellowish “ungeringelten” hair. Such 
individuals, as Mr. C. T. Ramsden of Guantanamo tells me, are 
believed to live in gray-barked trees. The lesser size (“ geringere 
Grésse’’) is not further specified, and may have been due to youth. 
At all events, the name C. pallidus, based on hearsay report, 
cannot be satisfactorily identified, much less applied to the small 
subfossil species here described. The latter may not have become 


56 ALLEN — AN EXTINCT CUBAN CAPROMYS 


extinct until after the discovery of America; but at all events the 
bones studied are well mineralized and seemingly much older in 
appearance than those of the introduced house rats, a few of which 
are present in the material brought back. Had this Capromys 
survived until Poey’s day, it is unlikely that Gundlach would have 


failed to discover it. 


4 253 


DEcEMBER 15, 1917 Vou. VI, pp. 57-72 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 


NEW SPHINGIDAE 


BY BENJAMIN PRESTON CLARK 


Ir is a pleasure, after the lapse of a year, to describe further 
species and subspecies of Sphingidae which I believe to be new. 
A number of these have been found in examining carefully all 
the American coliections of this family. Five new forms from 
South America, and three from Mexico, give promise of a 
further enlargement of the known Sphingid fauna of these 
countries. Of the remainder three are from Africa, one from 
the Philippines, and one from North America north of Mexico. 

Two corrections I desire to make in my paper! of Dec. 5, 1916. 
Amplypterus gannascus denton should be known as Amplypterus 
dentoni, for, as Dr. Karl Jordan kindly called to my attention, 
Amplypterus gannascus occurs in Peru, and two subspecies of 
the same species cannot be residents in the same locality. The 
habitat of Protoparce afflicta bahamensis should have been stated 
as Andros Island. My friend Dr. W. M. Mann visited Andros 
in June, 1917, and collected in the same locality where Mr. 
Engelhardt took the type; he failed, however, to find further 
specimens, and it must be a rare moth. 


1 Proc. N. E. Z.C., VI, 39-50. 


58 CLARK — NEW SPHINGIDAE 


Protoparce hannibal mayi subsp. nov. 
Plate VII, figure 2. 


Al. ant. long., o', 51mm.; 9,56mm. Al. ant. lat., 7, 20mm.; 9, 
22 mm. Marg. ext., o', 30 mm.; 9, 32 mm. 

Habitat. — Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Three males and three females in 
coll. B. Preston Clark, given by Mr. E. May, after whom the species is 
named. 

In size and general facies very similar to P. hannibal. There are, how- 
ever, certain well-marked differences. The light marginal line of the fore 
wing is heavier and whiter; it also is more closely parallel to the distal 
margin as it approaches the apex of wing. The postmedian band of the 
hind wing above is whiter, and less suffused with black, than in P. hannibal; 
this is especially marked in the female. Beneath, the markings are darker 
and more distinct than in P. hannibal, and the double postmedian line of 
the hind wing is more deeply dentate. These differences on the under side 
are more marked in the male. 


Protoparce hoffmanni sp. nov. 
Plate VII, figure 1. 


Al.ant.long.,2,47mm. Al.ant.lat.,?,20mm. Marg. ext., 9,16 mm. 

Habitat. — Misantha, Mexico. One male in coll. B. Preston Clark, re- 
ceived from Messrs. Luck and Gehlen. 

Ingeneral appearance near P.lanuginosa. Palpi: Istsegment light brown, 
2d and 3d segments darker, shading very dark along the eyes. Antennae 
white above, brown beneath, dark at the tips. Head and thorax gray, the 
latter with black lateral line. Abdomen brown, irrorated with white scales; 
brownish yellow median spot on first tergite; white side tufts. Small 
brown median spots on anterior segments. 

Fore wing above, light brown with darker markings, much more distinct 
than in P. lanuginosa, and with greater contrast in color between ground 


Oia CLARK — NEW SPHINGIDAE 59 


tone and markings. Two discal streaks R3-M2 very faint. Transverse an- 
temedian, median and postmedian lines similar to P. florestan, narrow and 
clearly marked. Antemedian irregular in outline; three median lines sharply 
serrate; postmedian regularly undulate; a light band between the two 
outer median lines; apical line behind SC5 heavy. Dark markings on 
costal margin at ends of transverse lines 9 in number. Cilia white, dark 
at the veins. 

Hind wing above, dark brown, shading lighter toward base; postmedian 
band white, shaded with light brown, bordered proximally by a darker 
transverse line extending from anal angle to costal margin. Faint line 
parallel to this line, distant 2 mm. proximally, and fading away before 
reaching inner margin. Cilia white, dark at veins. 

Under side: fore wing light brown, unicolorous, a faint postmedian dark 
brown transverse band; cilia as above; between veins on distal margin, 
white lunulate spots. Hind wing light brown, white at anal margin; a 
transverse line corresponding to postmedian line on upper side; another 
faint antemedian line 3 mm. distant proximally at anal angle, and 6 mm. 
at inner margin. 


Dolba schausi sp. nov. 
Plate VIII, figure 3. 


Al.ant.long.,?,30mm. Al.ant.lat.,9,13mm. Marg.ext., 9,16 mm. 

Habitat.— Cauca Valley, Colombia. One female in coll. B. Preston Clark. 
I have named this species for my friend William Schaus. 

Facies and coloration so closely simulating D. hylaeus of North America 
that the species is best described by stating the various points of difference. 

Abdomen: White lateral spots and lines are narrrower. 

Fore wing above: Less contrast between the black and white markings 
and the brown ground tone of the wing. The sharp black markings of D. 
hylaeus become brown, and the white ones are irrorated with brown. The 
effect is a more uniform coloration and a blurring of the maculation. Post- 
median line running from costal to inner margin, so clear and sharply serrate 
in D. hylaeus, is vestigial and less sharply serrate. It thus serves as the 
proximal border of a dark brown band from costal to inner margin, 4 mm. 
wide at the costal margin and broadening gradually to a width of 6 mm. 
at the inner margin. Distal margin evenly convex, and more strongly so 
than in D. hylaeus. Hinder angle less sharp (more obtuse). 

Hind wing above: Basal area whitish. The broad black line extending 
from base to median band in D. hylaeus, is in this species brown, narrow, 


60 CLARK — NEW SPHINGIDAE 


and sharply truncate before reaching this band, being thus completely sur- 
rounded by a pear-shaped whitish band. Median band light brown, gemi- 
nate, broadening and becoming indistinct toward inner margin. Marginal 
band light brown, and truncate on M1; from this vein to inner margin 
the wing is whitish, dark on the veins and toward distal margin. 

Fore wing beneath: Light brown, unicolorous save for a lighter brown 
marginal area extending narrowly from base of inner margin two thirds the 
distance to hinder angle; a dark brown wavy line extends from a point on 
costal margin 8 mm. from apex to R2, and thence obscurely to inner mar- 
gin, which it reaches 4 mm. from hinder angle; this line is bordered 
distally by a faint whitish band 1 mm. in breadth. White dots of cilia 
between the veins are broader than in D. hylaeus. 

Hind wing beneath: Light brown, with median line single instead of gemi- 
nate; both this and the postmedian lines are less sharply marked and less 
serrate than in D. hylaeus. Dark brown area at anal angle extending to M2. 


Dolbogene manni sp. nov. 
Plate VIII, figure 5. 


Al. ant. long., 7, 25mm. Al. ant. lat., 7, 10 mm. Marg. ext., 3, 
15 mm. 

Habitat. — Guerrero, Mexico. One male in coll. B. Preston Clark, ob- 
tained from the collection of Jacob Doll, where it had long lain undescribed. 
Named for my friend, Dr. W. M. Mann, who has done such successful 
collecting of lepidoptera in Mexico. 

A narrow-winged insect. 

Palpi brown, darker along the eye, irrorated with white. Antennae brown 
above, white beneath, long (15 mm.), and strongly pectinated. Head, 
thorax and abdomen above, uniform dark brown, patagia still darker. 
Breast and legs brown, irrorated with white. Abdomen beneath, yellowish 
white, brown irrorated with yellow at anal tip. 

Fore wing above: Smoky brown with lighter shading. More uniform 
in color than D. hartwegi, and bands and markings more obscure. White 
spot at end of cell. Prominent dark brown area about 7 mm. in length, 
extending from base of wing on inner margin, where it is 2 mm. wide, 
widening and becoming obscure. Irregular dark patch 3 mm. in diameter 
at hinder angle. Prominent postmedian dark brown dash, 4mm. in length, 
between R3 and M1, midway between apex of cell and distal margin. 


moi CLARK — NEW SPHINGIDAE 61 


Cilia brown, white-dotted between the veins. Apical line heavier than in 
D. hartwegi. 

Hind wing above: Smoky brown. A black semilunar patch at anal 
angle, 5 mm. wide on inner margin, and 3 mm. in depth. A pale brown 
wavy discal band similar to D. hartwegi, but narrower and not becoming 
white toward anal angle. Cilia largely brown, with white dots between 
the veins, and at anal angle. 

Fore wing beneath: Light brown postmedian wavy band about 2 mm. 
in width, extending at its inner edge from a point on costal margin 8 mm. 
from apex to the inner margin, which it reaches faintly 4 mm. from hinder 
angle. Irregular dark patch, 2 mm. in diameter, at hinder angle. Basal 
area, proximally of the postmedian band, dark gray-brown. Marginal area 
along distal edge posteriorly of this band, slightly darker than it in tint. 
Brown irregular apical line dentate between SC4 and SC5, and more deeply 
dentate between SC5 and R1, terminating just behind R1. 

Hind wing beneath: Light postmedian band, basal area and submarginal 
area, all as in fore wing, the latter shading gradually darker brown as it 
approaches the anal angle. Cilia of both wings as on upper side. 


Oxyambulyx liturata johnsoni subsp. nov. 
Plate VIII, figure 1. 


Al. ant. long., 9, 50 mm. Al. ant. lat.. 9, 20mm. Marg. ext., 2, 
28 mm. 

Habitat. — Philippine Islands, probably Manila. One female in coll. 
B. Preston Clark, given by my friend Prof. Orson B. Johnson, of the 
University of Washington, and named in honor of him. The specimen 
was sent to Dr. Karl Jordan, who at once pronounced it a new subspecies. 

Smaller than O. liturata. Fore wing, both above and beneath, more 
yellowish. Submarginal line of fore wing close to fringe posteriorly on 
both upper and under sides. Light band, proximally of the submarginal 
line above, less prominent than in O. liturata. Palpi, breast, abdomen 
beneath, and base of both wings beneath, pinkish. 


62 CLARK — NEW SPHINGIDAE 


Libyoclanis hollandi sp. nov. 
Plate VII, figure 3. 


Al. ant. long., 9, 56mm. AI. ant. lat., 9, 21mm. Marg. ext., 9, 
33 mm. 

Habitat. — Medje, Congo. One female in coll. B. Preston Clark. 

Head and thorax reddish brown. Abdomen wood-brown above, with 
narrow transverse bands at base of tergites of darker tint; lighter below. 
Ill-defined white lateral patch at base, shading into yellow on second and 
third tergites. Antennae short, brown. 

Fore wing above: Produced at apex into a prominent lobe, as in L. 
bainbridgei, about 4 mm. long, measured from tip of SC5. Wood-brown 
with lighter shading; basal area bright red-brown, extending anteriorly 
to apex of cell, and posteriorly nearly to the inner angle. A sharply marked 
lunulate apical area from tip of lobe to SC5, 2 mm. wide on this vein. The 
line bordering this area costad, extends to R3, sharply angled on R2, reach- 
ing R3 20 mm. from distal margin. Black stigma, 1 mm. in diameter, at 
apex of cell on D2. Distal margin deeply incurved below the tip, thence 
regularly and strongly convex nearly to the base of the wing, with no ob- 
vious hinder angle; slightly incurved toward the base; notched on the 
veins. Two obscure lines, distant on costal margin 12 mm. and 20 mm. 
from tip, broadly lunulate between the veins, extend from costal margin 
diagonally to R2. Cilia brown. 

Hind wing above: Dark wood-brown, somewhat lighter toward inner 
margin. Light pink band, 2 mm. wide at base, extends to anal angle, 
where it broadens to 3 mm. and then shades off through reddish brown 
into the ground tone of the wing. Cilia yellow. 

Fore wing beneath: Buff, darker on the veins. Apical streak very dis- 
tinct, continued to M2, which it reaches 8 mm. from distal margin; curves 
slightly basad to R3, where it is distant 13 mm. from distal margin; 
obtusely angled at R4. Costal margin lighter buff to apex of cell. Two 
faint abbreviated lines from costal margin to R2, corresponding to lunulate 
line on upper side. Apical line bordered by a lighter buff area, shading 
darker toward distal margin. 

Hind wing beneath: Light buff, darker along hinder margin, and with 
a brown basal streak. Apical streak distinct to R3, where it becomes ves- 
tigial. Two discal lines, so obvious in L. major, are very faint, and do not 
extend beyond the apical streak. 


vita CLARK — NEW SPHINGIDAE 63 


Polyptychus roseola sp. nov. 
Plate IX, figure 2. 


Al. ant. long., o’', 28 mm. Al. ant. lat.. «1, 11 mm. Marg. ext., o, 
14 mm. 

Habitat. — Fort Crampel, French Congo. One male in coll. B. Preston 
Clark, received from Messrs. Luck and Gehlen. 

In form nearest to P. retusus, but a complete contrast in point of color. 
Palpi pink beneath, brown along the eyes. Antennae light brown. Head, 
thorax and abdomen above light pink, unicolorous. Beneath, dull pink, 
irrorated with brown scales. 

Fore wing above light pink, shaded with deeper pink. Three trans- 
verse lines cross the wing from costal to inner margin. The inner, a me- 
dian line, runs in a wavy S from a point midway of the costal margin to a 
point 8 mm. distant from the hinder angle. The second, a postmedian line, 
runs parallel to the median, 5 mm. distant. The area between these two 
lines makes a darker pink band. The third, an undulate submarginal line, 
runs from a point 3 mm. distant from the hinder angle obliquely to SC5, 
being at that point 6 mm. distant from the distal margin; thence it is 
angled sharply basad to the costal margin. This line is of slightly deeper 
tint on the veins. A large pink stigma on the cell, with light centre. An 
undulate subbasal line runs transversely from a point distant 5 mm. from 
the base of the costal margin, becoming faint toward the inner margin. A 
line of faint vein dots midway between the submarginal line and the distal 
margin, terminating in a subapical spot 5 mm. from the apex. Cilia brown. 

Hind wing light pink, darker toward anal angle. Dark pink elongate 
patch on SM2, midway of abdominal margin, 5 mm. in length. Subanal 
dot dark pink. Cilia pink, except at anal angle where they are brown. 

Both wings beneath pink, light at base of inner margin of fore wing, and 
at anal margin of hind wing. Fore wing crossed by three faint undulate 
lines, the inner duplicating the line of the first postdiscal line above, the 
outer duplicating that of the line of submarginal dots above, and the middle 
one that of the posterior postdiscal line, save that it curves evenly, and is 
not sharply angled at SM5. Cilia dark. Hind wing crossed by three faint 
lines: The inner one, median, obscure; the middle one, postmedian, runs 
from the anal angle at first straight, and then curving basad, to the costal 
margin; the outer one from a point just proximal of the anal angle in a 
direction parallel to the distal margin, but drawing gradually away from 
it basad, to the inner margin. Cilia dark with light tips, except entirely 
dark at anal angle. 


64 CLARK — NEW SPHINGIDAE very 


Lycosphingia hollandi sp. nov. 
Plate VIII, figure 4. 


Al. ant. long., «, 30 mm. AI. ant. lat., %,13mm. Marg. ext., 3, 
17 mm. 

Habitat.—Lolodorf, Kamerun. T. A. Reis. One male in coll. B. Preston 
Clark, given by my friend, Dr.William J. Holland, and named for him because 
of his unrivalled contributions to the knowledge of African lepidoptera. 

In general appearance this beautiful species suggests Orecta fruhstorfert 
Clark. The fore wing is more falcate, but less so than in L. hamatus Dewitz. 
Antennae white above, yellow beneath. Palpi orange red. Frons and head 
yellow. Thorax and abdomen above, brown. Breast, body and abdomen 
beneath, orange red; 8th sternite beneath, white irrorated with brown. 
Legs brown. 

Fore wing above: Strongly falcate, truncate at tip. Brown, shaded 
with purple. Anal angle strongly produced. Costal margin regularly con- 
vex. Distal margin regularly and deeply concave. Inner margin S-shaped, 
incurving from hinder angle, then curving strongly outward, and again 
inward as it reaches base of wing. Prominent dark brown, rounded, basal 
spot, 2 mm. in diameter, and incised externally on SM2. Large white disco- 
cellular stigma. A broad faint brown shade extending from a point on costal 
margin one fourth the distance from the base toward hinder angle; a second 
shade roughly parallel to the inner one, and leaving costal margin midway 
between base and apex; between these two shades a faint transverse wavy 
line. Both shades terminating on a brown line running from a point on 
inner margin 6 mm. from hinder angle. This line curves distad until at 
R3 it is distant but 3 mm. from distal margin; thence it curves costad, 
and broadens to a shade approximately parallel to the two inner ones as 
it approaches the costal margin. This line is bordered externally from 
inner margin beyond M1 by a narrow purplish line. A cloud of scales of 
the same color lies between this line and the distal margin. A subapical 
dark brown patch extends 8 mm. on the costal margin from a point 3 mm. 
from apex, and is irrorated mesially with purplish scales. Cilia brown. 

Hind wing above: Red-brown, unicolorous, angled at Rl. Anal 
margin light brown; at anal angle a narrow, sharply lunulate, geminate, 
dark brown line extends to M2; a narrow purplish line between the two 
brown ones; posteriorly the lunules are filled in with light purple. The 
area to the margin is dark brown, and the undulate margin is marked by 
a fine, clear, triple line of purple, dark brown and white, the latter color 


fd CLARK — NEW SPHINGIDAE 65 


being produced by the cilia, which are white at this point, as indeed else- 
where on this wing, except on the veins, where they are dark brown. 

Fore wing beneath: Light red-brown at base, shading to dark brown 
at distal margin. Very faint postmedian line from costal margin, becoming 
soon obscure. Double postmedian line, dotted on veins, from costal mar- 
gin two thirds the distance from base to apex, sharply angled on R1, and 
thence extending roughly parallel to distal margin to the inner margin. 
Very faint light purple subapical patch, corresponding exactly to patch on 
upper side except that at its basal third it disappears. Cilia light brown. 

Hind wing beneath: Light brown, unicolorous. Faint median line from 
a point midway of costal margin to anal margin. Midway between this 
line and the distal margin a faint postmedian line, slightly undulate, and 
approximately parallel to the margin, dotted on veins. Cilia light brown, 
dotted on veins. 


Isognathus rimosa australis subsp. nov. 
Plate IX, figure 5. 


Al. ant. long., 7, 31 mm. Al. ant. lat., %, 11 mm. Marg. ext., 3, 
18 mm. 

Habitat. — Ururahy, Eastern Brazil. Haseman, 1908. One male in coll. 
B. Preston Clark, given by Dr. W. J. Holland. 

Fore wing above: Generally brown in tint, shaded with white. Less 
contrast in color than in either J. rimosa or I. r. papayae. All the mark- 
ings are finer than in papayae, the white tuft at base of fore wing, so 
prominent in papayae, is here light brown, and inconspicuous. The black 
streak, R3-M1, is very narrow and but 3 mm. in length. A second nar- 
row streak, M1—M2, 2 mm. in length and diagonally basad from the first. 
Distal margin convex, and obtusely angled at R3. Narrower-winged than 
either rimosa or papayae. An evenly curved white line, convex dis- 
tally, extends from a point on costal margin, 9 mm. from the apex, to a 
point on M1, 4 mm. from the distal margin. This line is sagittate distally 
on the veins, the points being black-tipped. Veins, SC1 to M1 inclusive, 
proximal of this line, are conspicuously white with black dots. 

Hind wing above: Marginal band is in width between rimosa and 
papayae. 

Fore wing beneath: Brown, unicolorous, save for yellow band along 
the inner margin, narrowing to hinder angle. Faint trace of distal marginal 
band. 


66 CLARK — NEW SPHINGIDAE 


Hind wing beneath: Yellow basal area extending from R3 to anal 
angle; save for this, the wing is brown with a bluish tinge, and black 
toward anal angle. Discal lines obscure. 


In a species showing so much subspecific variation it is not 
surprising to find a southern form. 


Nyceryx mulleri sp. nov. 
Plate VIII, figure 2. 


Al. ant. long., 7, 23mm. AL. ant. lat., 7, 10mm. Marg. ext., o, 
12 mm. 

Habitat. — Orizaba, Mexico. One male in coll. B. Preston Clark. 

Antennae yellow, brown at tip. Head and thorax light brown with 
darker shading. Crest prominent, dark brown. Abdomen dark brown 
above. Upper hairs of lateral tufts at base bluish white. Lateral trans- 
verse bands anterior to base of tergites 2 to 7, bluish white. Very narrow 
median yellow bands at base of posterior tergites. Abdomen beneath, red 
irrorated with yellow, darker at base of sternites. Hairs at tip of 8th 
abdominal sternite beneath, white. 

Fore wing above: Light brown with darker shading. Facies very like 
that of N. clarki Fassl, but a smaller insect. No silvery gray markings. 
A broad black patch on hinder margin, extending, from a point 4 mm. 
from the base, for a distance of 5 mm. on the margin, extending to cell, and 
then continued to costal margin by a narrow band. This patch is slightly 
incurved anteriorly, and concave distally. Basad of this patch are two 
dark brown marks on costal margin, the basal one extending to Inner mar- 
gin, the outer truncate on M2. Distally of this patch a light area extends 
to a point slightly within hinder angle on inner margin, and narrows to a 
blunt point on costal margin. It contains three wavy transverse lines, 
which continue obscurely through the darker apical area to costal margin. 
Dark apical dot, SC4 to SC5. Anterior to this dot is a dark brown triangle, 
with base on costal margin, 5 mm. in width, and with its apex on R3. 
Distal margin similar in outline to N. eximia, except that angle at R3 and 
hinder angle are slightly more produced. Cilia dark. 

Hind wing above: Dark brown with chrome yellow basal area. This 
area is sharply truncate before reaching anal margin, and extends to inner 
margin; it is more extended and more sharply marked than in N. eximia. 


ea CLARK — NEW SPHINGIDAE 67 


Inner edge of dark marginal area is shallowly S-shaped, curving distally 
as it leaves the inner margin, and then basad. Anal area of dark marginal 
band, bluish with wavy submarginal lines. 

Fore wing beneath: Chrome yellow from base to disc, gradually merging 
into a tawny yellow, and darkening to the marginal band, which latter is 
brown slightly irrorated with white. Band sharply serrate between veins, 
R2 to SM2, and widest between R2 and R3. Three S-shaped, postme- 
dian transverse lines; the inner and middle ones running from costal 
margin, and becoming obscure before reaching inner margin; the outer 
continuing to it, and touching the inner edge of marginal band between 
R2 and R3. Cilia dark. 

Hind wing beneath: Color, lines and marginal band similar to fore 
wing, except that the transverse lines all extend to anal margin. Anal 
area light brown. Cilia dark, light at anal angle. 


Pholus satellitia intermedia subsp. nov. 
Plate IX, figure 1. 


Al. ant. long., 7, 38 mm.; 9,44 mm. AL. ant. lat., 7,15mm.; 9, 
17mm. Marg. ext., 7, 20mm.; 9, 24 mm. 

Habitat. — Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas. One male and one female 
from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, in coll. B. Preston Clark, types. One 
male from Greenville, Mississippi, and one female from Brownsville, 
Texas, in coll. Dr. William Barnes, cotypes. 

Thorax and abdomen light brown; thorax with dark median line and 
dark patagia. Fore and hind wings above, light brown with darker 
shading; beneath, dark brown with pink tinge. 

Fore wing above: Subapical patch on costal margin, truncate on SC5. 
Similar patch near hinder angle on inner margin, continued slightly 
beyond M2. Rhombiform median patch on middle of inner margin, con- 
tinued to the base in slightly lighter color. Prominent double stigma on 
cell. A dark shade extends from the median spot of the costal margin to 
a point two thirds the distance from the apex to the hinder angle, is 
angled on M1, and follows it to the distal margin. Vein M1 is noticeably 
pink. From the apex of the rhombiform median patch two parallel lines 
extend to the edge of the dark shade, and continue within it to the costal 
margin. The outer line bears away from the inner one costally of M1. 
A pale wavy lunate line, shaded darkly on both sides, extends from the 
apex to R3 on the distal margin. 


68 CLARK — NEW SPHINGIDAE Paya 


Hind wing above: Basally yellow-brown. A large, black, circular spot 
above the inner margin; a band of submarginal spots bordered inwardly 
by a pink line; spots distinct toward anal angle and continued obscurely 
to inner margin. Anal angle slightly pink. 

Fore wing beneath: An irregular gray marginal distal band, widest on 
R2. Two distinct postmedian lines semi-parallel to distal margin, and 
turning basad on R2 as they approach the costal margin; the outer line 
lunulate and touching the distal band. 

Hind wing beneath: A similar gray marginal distal band, and two dis- 
tinct lines semi-parallel to the distal margin, and turning basad as on the 
fore wing. 

This form appears to belong, territorially, to a group of Sphingidae in- 
cluding Protambulyx carteri, Isoparce cupressi, Lapara halicarniae, Iso- 
gramma hageni, and Arctonotus vega, which occur along the Gulf States of 
the United States and west into Texas and New Mexico, and, so far as 
known, neither north nor south of this belt. 

Structurally, it les between pandorus, licaon and elisa, is nearest to 
licaon, and is smaller than any other Pholus found in continental North 
America. The upper side of both fore and hind wings, is of the color of 
licaon, while the outer margin of the fore wing shows as much convexity 
as pandorus, more than licaon, and less than elisa. The dark subbasal 
patch at the inner margin of the fore wing is continuous with the rhombi- 
form median patch, and is slightly lighter in color; in these respects inter- 
media differs from licaon and approaches pandorus. The outer edge of this 
median patch curves basad as it approaches the inner margin, differing in 
this respect from all three forms mentioned above. The postdiscal lines 
on the fore wing are nearly parallel to the distal margin, and thus reach 
the costal edge nearer the apex of the wing than in pandorus, and more 
nearly as in licaon. The tone of both the fore and the hind wing, beneath 
— dark brown with a distinct pink tinge, very marked on the hind wing — 
is in marked contrast with the light brown under side of licaon, the green of 
pandorus, and the dark brown of elisa which is unrelieved by any touch of 
pink. The pink tinge at the anal angle of the hind wing above is less 
marked than in pandorus, while the black submarginal spots are heavier 
than in either elisa or pandorus, and are as large as in licaon. 


While the differences separating this subspecies from the 
others mentioned, are not many, they are distinct, and the 
form has a character of its own. 


ae, CLARK — NEW SPHINGIDAE 69 


Xylophanes tyndarus marginalis subsp. nov. 
Plate IX, figure 3. 


Al. ant. long., 7’, 26 mm.; 9,31 mm. Al. ant. lat., 7,11mm.; 9, 
13mm. Marg. ext., o',16mm.; 9, 18 mm. 

Habitat. — Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. One male and one female in coll. 
B. Preston Clark, received from Mr. George Franck. 

A smaller, shorter-winged insect than X.tyndarus. More yellow in gen- 
eral coloration both above and beneath. 

Fore wing above: Three antemedian lines obscure. First discal line 
less oblique than in X. tyndarus, contrasting less sharply with the rest of 
the wing, and shading off abruptly externally. Line 4 faint. Apical line 
faint but long, joining line 4 behind R2. 

Hind wing above: Green band reaching to the costal margin, and more 
extended distally as it approaches it, the black marginal band being thus 
narrower costally, than in X. tyndarus. The black basal area is less ex- 
tended. 

Fore wing beneath: Basal area light brown and less extended. All 
markings less distinct. Apical line less oblique, being, behind R2, distant 
only 4 mm. from the distal margin. Marginal area bordered by this line 
and by the irregularly undulate postdiscal line, is thus narrower than in 
X.tyndarus. Discal line very faint. 

Hind wing beneath: Median line faint. Wing yellowish. Marginal 
band narrow, as on upper side. 


It seems probable that a small male from Theresopolis, men- 
tioned in the ‘ Revision’! as being in the British Museum, be- 
longs to this subspecies. 


1 Novitates Zoélogicae, Vol. IX, Supplement, p. 683. 


70 CLARK — NEW SPHINGIDAE 


Xylophanes mossi sp. nov. 
Plate IX, figure 4. 


Al. ant. long., o, 35mm.; 9,40 mm. AI. ant. lat. 7,14mm.; Q, 
16mm. Marg. ext., o', 19 mm.; 9, 21 mm. 

Habitat.— Para, Brazil. Two males and two females in coll. B. Preston 
Clark; two males in Mus. Tring; two males in coll. of my friend Rev. 
Arthur Miles Moss, by whom all these specimens were raised, and for whom 
the species is named. 

Male. First segment of palpi light yellow beneath, irrorated with light 
brown, warm reddish brown laterally; second and third segments brown, 
shading to warm reddish brown toward the eyes. Eyes large, fully as much 
so as in X. rufescens, and dark brown in color. 

Head, thorax and abdomen above, brownish clay-color, darker toward 
the head; yellowish brown beneath. Abdomen with a few golden brown 
lateral scales on posterior segments; light yellow side tufts at base; black 
spot on first segment. Antennae light brown above, white beneath. Legs 
very light brown. 

Fore wing above, brownish clay-color like thorax. Unicolorous, save 
for the following markings. A narrow yellow subbasal band on the inner 
margin 7 mm. in length, black apically and basad. Minute black stigma 
on cell. A faint postcellular shade lying between the stigma and the distal 
margin, and extending to a faint median transverse line that runs from a 
median point on the inner margin to a point on the costal margin 11 mm. 
distant from the apex. Parallel to this line distad, and 1 mm. from it, ex- 
tends a line, faint at all points and becoming almost invisible costad. An 
equally faint submarginal line runs parallel to the distal margin, distant 
from it about 5 mm., accentuated by faint black vein dots, and terminating 
at the apex. A few black scales make a spot on costal margin 7 mm. from 
the apex. A few black submarginal scales on the veins, and at the wing 
apex between the veins. 

Hind wing above, black. A light yellow submarginal band, shaded with 
black, reaching nearly to the costal margin, dilated basad on SM2, followed 
by a marginal patch at anal angle reaching to the base of the wing. 

Both wings beneath, brownish clay-color, slightly irrorated with black 
scales, especially on the veins and toward the distal margins. Fore wing 
with a roughly triangular postcellular black shade extending two thirds 
of the way to the hinder angle, and fading out costally. A series of vein 


"roi7 CLARK — NEW SPHINGIDAE 71 


dots 5 mm. from the distal margin, and a small black dot on the costal 
margin, 7 mm. from the apex, correspond to those on upper side. Very 
faint marginal band extending from apex to hinder angle, and broadest at R2, 
about 5mm. Hind wing pinkish, unicolorous, with a series of black vein 
dots 3 mm. from the distal margin. Cilia dark on the veins, elsewhere 
the same color as the wing, except between Mi and M2, and between M2 
and SM2, where they are pure white. 

Female. Head, thorax and abdomen above, red-brown, darker toward 
the head. Fore wing above, warm red-brown, similar to the ground 
tone of X. rufescens. Markings more distinct than in the male. 

Both wings beneath, dark red-brown where the male is brownish 
clay-color. On the fore wing the black basal shade is extended costad. On 
the hind wing the cilia are extended light, except at veins. Otherwise the 
coloring is as in the male. 


This form seems most nearly allied to X. rufescens, the bands 
on the hind wing being in close correspondence. 


72 


Figure 1. 
Figure 2. 
Figure 3. 


Figure 1. 
Figure 2. 
Figure 3. 
Figure 4. 
Figure 5. 


Figure 1. 
Figure 2. 
Figure 3. 
Figure 4. 
Figure 5. 


CLARK — NEW SPHINGIDAE 


DESCRIPTION OF PLATES. 


Puate VII. 


Protoparce hoffmanni sp. nov. Female. 
Protoparce hannibal mayi subsp. nov. Male. 
Libyoclanis hollandi sp. nov. Female. 


Puate VIII. 


Oxyambulyz liturata johnsoni subsp. aov. Female. 
Nyceryx mulleri sp. nov. Male. 

Dolba schausi sp. nov. Female. ey 
Lycosphingia hollandi sp. nov. Male. 

Dolbogene manni sp. nov. Male. 


PuaTe IX. 


Pholus satellitia intermedia subsp. nov. Male. 
Polyptychus roseola sp. nov. Male. 

Xylophanes tyndarus marginalis subsp. nov. Male. 
Xylophanes mossi sp. nov. Male. 

Isognathus rimosa australis subsp. nov. Male. 


JA, 353 


DeceMBER 21, 1917 Vou. VI, pr. 73-76 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 


NOTES ON THE GEOGRAPHICAL RACES OF 
TANGARA GYROLOIDES. 


BY OUTRAM BANGS. 


Tue blue-rumped green tanager has had, in nomenclature, a 
rather checkered career. In the present notes, I discuss Lafres- 
naye’s substitute types; describe one more subspecies; discuss 
the relationships of the form from the line of the Panama Rail- 
road; and express my opinion of Hellmayr’s treatment of the 
various geographical races. To make myself clear I must repeat 
a little of what has already been published. 

The species was originally named by Swainson (Anim. in 
Menag., 1838, 356) Aglaia peruviana, on the strength of a speci- 
men from Peru in the collection of W. Hooker. This name was 
preoccupied, and for a long time the bird has been known by the 
next name in order, not preoccupied,— Aglaia gyroloides La- 
fresnaye (Rev. Zool. 1847, 277). Before the species was divided 
by any one into subspecies, I noticed that all Colombian skins 
had green lesser wing coverts, and all from Central America, as 
well as the one or two poor specimens from Ecuador and Peru 
then available to me, had bright yellow lesser wing coverts. I 
therefore named the Colombian bird, Calospiza gyroloides 
deleticia (Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 1908, 160). Hellmayr 


74 BANGS — NOTES ON TANGARA GYROLOIDES. [? 22°: 
(P. Z.S., 1911, 1104) was the next reviewer of the species. Care- 
fully comparing specimens of the various races, and weighing the 
results with Swainson’s description, he decided that Peru was 
an error and substituted Colombia as the type locality of the 
species. Lafresnaye’s name was a substitute one, and of course 
the type locality reverts to Swainson. In this paper, then, 
Hellmayr called the Colombian bird Calospiza gyroloides 
qyroloides (Lafr.), and named as new two other forms, the Peru- 
vian, C. g. catharinae after his wife, and the Central American, 
C. g. bangsi after me. He also called attention to the slightly 
different race inhabiting western Ecuador, which he did not 
name because he thought it too close to bangs?, and that possibly 
bangsi ranged continuously from Costa Rica to western Ecuador, 
west of the range of C. g. gyroloides in Colombia. He was fol- 
lowed in this arrangement by Berlepsch in his ‘ Revision der 
Tanagriden,’ Berlin, 1910, and by Brabourne and Chubb in 
their ‘ List,’ 1912. 

In thus shifting the names and type localities Hellmayr may 
be right, but I think it a little high-handed. Swainson named 
other Peruvian forms from the collection of W. Hooker, showing 
Hooker had birds from that country. Also, it seems to me, 
Swainson might very well have described the lesser coverts 
exactly as he did, had he had an immature male or a female 
before him. Under the circumstances, I prefer, not without 
reluctance, however, to follow Hellmayr myself. Future orni- 
thological critics must judge this rather peculiar case for them- 
selves, and will, I think, be as likely not to agree with Hellmayr 
as to follow him. 

The species appears to be rare in Panama. W. W. Brown, Jr., 
when collecting for me at Loma del Leon and near Panama City, 
did not take it, and the only specimens from the line of the 
Panama Railroad I have seen are a pair in the Museum of Com- 
parative Zodlogy, received years ago from James McLeannan. 
The male is a fine old adult, and is intermediate between the 
Central American bangsi and the Colombian gyroloides, though 
decidedly nearer the latter. Its lesser wing coverts are green, 
slightly tinged with yellowish, not yellow as in bangsi, but a 


A a 
eo BANGS — NOTES ON TANGARA GYROLOIDES. 75 


little yellower than the shining yellowish green of the coverts in 
gyroloides. If the bird of the Panama Railroad line must be 
called by one name or the other, I should unhesitatingly call it 
gyroloides. Thus it would seem all chance of bangsi having a 
continuous range to western Ecuador is precluded, and I do not 
hesitate to name the western Ecuador form. 

Chapman (The Distribution of Bird-Life in Colombia, 1917, 
p. 597) does not recognize the western Ecuador form, calling the 
bird ranging from Ricaurte, Colombia, to western Ecuador T’. g. 
bangs?, and cites this case as one of the many examples of broken 
distribution in range, in the region he is treating of. Perhaps he 
did not compare his birds very carefully with a sufficiently large 
series of the northern bangsz; at all events all skins I have seen 
from western Ecuador are constantly paler. 

There are four specimens in the Lafresnaye Collection, three 
of which certainly are the types of Lafresnaye’s name. They 
are not, of course, types of the species, which remain the origi- 
nal specimens or specimen in the Hooker collection, named by 
Swainson. They are, however, of some historical interest. All 
have original labels. No. 2916 has a tag on which only the 
word “ Bogota” is inscribed, not in Lafresnaye’s handwriting. 
It is the Colombian green-winged gyroloides. The other three, 
nos. 2917, 2918, and 2919, all have lengthy original labels 
written in the hand I take to be Lafresnaye’s. Discussion of 
synonymy almost always appears on the Lafresnaye labels, and 
is present as usual in the case of these three specimens. Besides 
this, no. 2917 has “‘Ag. gyroloides Nob. — Ag. peruviana Sw.” 
No. 2918 has “Ag. gyroloides Nob. Rio Negro ? — Cal. inter- 
medius Nob.” No. 2919 has ‘‘ Call. intermedius 9¢ Nob. in Mus. 
Nostra — Colombie.”” All three belong to the Peruvian form 
catharinae, with very large, bright yellow shoulder patches and 
greenish throat (between the blue of the neck and chestnut of 
the chin). I cannot find that the name ‘ intermedius’ was ever 
published, and I fancy it was an alternative manuscript name, 
which gave way to gyroloides in final naming of the species. 


76 BANGS — NOTES ON TANGARA GYROLOIDES. 


The four races, then, with their ranges, are as follows: 


Tangara gyroloides gyroloides (Lafr.). 


Central and western Colombia, north to the line of the Panama Rail- 
road. 


Tangara gyroloides bangsi (Hellm.). 


Costa Rica, Chiriqui, and Veragua. 


Tangara gyroloides nupera subsp. nov. 


Type, from Nanegal, western Ecuador, adult <, no. 74,066, M. C. Z., 
collected by the Williams College Expl. in Ecuador. 


Characters. —Similar to 7’. g. bangsi, with the lesser wing coverts yellow as 
in that form, and without greenish on throat (between the blue neck and 
chestnut chin) also of about the same size; but blue of rump and under 
parts paler, and the chestnut of head considerably paler. 

Confined to western Ecuador. 


Tangara gyroloides catharine (Hellm.). 


Northern Bolivia, Peru, upper Amazonia, eastern Ecuador to eastern 
slope of Andes in Colombia (Rio Meta). 


[4,253 


Freprvuary 6, 1918 Vou. VI, pr. 77-79 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 


AN UNDESCRIBED RACE OF HENSLOW’S SPARROW. 


BY WILLIAM BREWSTER. 


In connection with some notes relating to a western form of 
Henslow’s sparrow, published upwards of twenty years ago 
(Auk, VIII, 1891, pp. 145-146), I remarked incidentally that 
the birds which ‘‘ breed near Washington, D. C., . . . probably 
most nearly represent true henslowii.’’ This statement was in- 
correct and hence unfortunate. It must have been made with- 
out much if any thought as to where the type of the species 
originated. Such oversight may seem inexcusable now, but was 
not then generally so regarded by ornithologists, many of whom, 
indeed, were accustomed to consider typical the birds with 
which they happened to be most familiar or best supplied. 

The Henslow’s sparrow figured and described by Audubon, 
was obtained, he tells us, “‘ opposite Cincinnati, in the State of 
Kentucky, in the year 1820” (Orn. Biog., Vol. I, 1831, p. 360). 
His plate and description of this specimen indicate that it was 
not unlike others since obtained elsewhere in the Ohio River 
Valley, mostly in Illinois and Indiana. Presumably all such 
birds inhabiting that region in summer are essentially typical of 
the species which Audubon discovered and named. 

It is otherwise with those breeding east of the Alleghanies — 
at least in Virginia and New England. They represent a form 


78 BREWSTER—A RACE OF HENSLOW’S SPARROW. 


easily distinguishable from the Ohio Valley one, and well worth 
recognizing as a distinct subspecies, which may be named and 
characterized as follows: — 


Passerherbulus henslowi susurrans, subsp. nov. 
EASTERN HENSLOW’sS SPARROW. 


Type, from Falls Church, Fairfax County, Virginia, adult male, no. 5260, 
coll. William Brewster, taken July 12, 1879, by Pierre L. Jouy. 

Measurements (in inches and their hundredths — the good old-fashioned 
standard).! Adult male, type: wing, 2.16; tail, 1.80; tarsus, .70; exposed 
culmen, .50; depth of bill at base, .32. 

Subspecific characters. — Somewhat larger than henslowi verus, with rela- 
tively stouter, deeper bill, and much more reddish back and wings, whereon 
this color — inclining to bright chestnut — is almost always conspicuously 
present and sometimes so widespread that the dull black central areas of the 
feathers are thereby narrowed and otherwise obscured. Ohio Valley birds 
possess at most comparatively little chestnut coloring, and sometimes none 
whatever. As if to compensate for such lack of adornment, their dorsal 
markings are commonly broader and blacker than those of Eastern birds. 
The last-named difference is not quite constant, however, and therefore 
should not be regarded as more than an ‘ average character,’ so-called. 


Of adult birds taken in late spring or early summer, presum- 
ably on their breeding grounds, I have fifteen specimens of susur- 
rans from Fairfax County, Virginia, near Washington, D.C., and 
ten from Middlesex County, Massachusetts. All these are much 
alike as regards the essential characters above attributed to the 
Eastern subspecies, but in other respects they exhibit more or 
less individual variation. 

Typical henslowi, of the Ohio River Valley, is correspondingly 
represented, with similar general uniformity, by two specimens 
from Quincy, Illinois; one from Grand Crossing and two from 
the Kankakee Marshes, Indiana; two from Walworth County, 
Wisconsin. The two Kankakee birds are less typical than the 


1 Wing, 55; tail, 46; tarsus, 18; exposed culmen, 13; depth of bill at base, 8 mm.— Eb. 


Feb 6] | BREWSTER—A RACE OF HENSLOW’S SPARROW. 79 


others, however, and perhaps should be referred to susurrans. 
As both were taken early in the season, — on April 24, — they 
may have been migrants bound elsewhere to pass the summer. 

Twenty-six Henslow’s sparrows taken at various dates from 
October to April in our South Atlantic States, a favorite winter- 
ing ground for the species, are included in my collection. Al- 
though mostly immature, they may be identified subspecifically, 
without much difficulty, by keeping in mind the characters 
which serve to distinguish adult breeding birds. Thus deter- 
mined, fourteen of these Southern specimens seem to represent 
the Ohio Valley form, and twelve its subspecies susurrans. 

My former mistaken impression that the Henslow’s sparrow 
of Virginia might be considered typical of the species, was largely 
responsible for the separation of a South Dakota form, occidenta- 
lis, described in 1891 and since included in the A.O.U. Check- 
List. Although differing very satisfactorily from Eastern birds, 
it is perhaps not sufficiently unlike those of the Ohio Valley to 
merit continued recognition as a subspecies. That question may 
as well rest, however, until more material has accumulated to 
throw further needed light on it. 

While in pursuit of quail near Osterville, Massachusetts, on 
November 6, 1874, I shot a Henslow’s sparrow, flushing it among 
scrubby pitch pines scattered over a wind-swept hilltop remote 
from any marshy ground. This specimen has since been valued 
because taken at a seasonal date so late and in a locality where 
no such bird was looked for or seemed likely to occur. It now 
derives additional interest by reason of the fact that in every 
respect, apparently, it is an ultra-typical example of the Ohio 
Valley form and hence true henslowi. No other specimen thus 
characterized has ever, to my knowledge, been secured any- 
where in New England. 


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J4,25 3 


Frsrvary 6, 1918 Vou. VI, pp. 81-82 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 


TWO UNDESCRIBED NEWFOUNDLAND BIRDS, 


BY CHARLES FOSTER BATCHELDER. 


SomE collections of Newfoundland birds that Mr. Outram 
Bangs and I have recently examined, contain excellent series of 
the ovenbird and of the yellow warbler. In each of these species 
the material shows the Newfoundland bird to be so markedly 
different from its representatives in adjacent regions that it 
obviously should be recognized as a subspecies. 

They may be characterized as follows. 


Seiurus aurocapillus furvior subsp. nov. 


Type, from near Deer Pond, Newfoundland, @ adult, no. 6750, coll. of 
C. F. Batchelder, collected June 21, 1894, by A. E. Colburn. 

Characters. — Similar to Seiurus aurocapillus aurocapillus, but plumage 
in general deeper-colored or. darker. Tawny of crown browner, less yellow- 
ish — ‘ amber brown,’! instead of the ‘ochraceous orange’ of aurocapillus; 
black of sides of crown more extensive and slightly more intense; back, 
from nape to upper tail coverts, and including scapulars, duskier green; 
dark markings of breast and sides heavier and blacker; brown of flanks 
deeper. 

Measurements. — Average of eight adult males: wing, 77.2; tail, 55.8; 
culmen, 13.9; tarsus, 22.9mm. Average of five adult females: wing, 74.8; 
tail, 53.9; culmen, 13.3; tarsus, 22.6 mm. Six specimens taken in the 
moulting season were not measured. 


1 Names of colors given in quotation marks, refer to Ridgway’s ‘ Color Standards and 
Color Nomenclature,’ 1912. 


82 BATCHELDER—TWO NEWFOUNDLAND Birps.  [P-4:F-2.0- 


Dendroica aestiva amnicola subsp. nov. 


Type, from Curslet, Newfoundland, @ adult, no. 5360, coll. of C. F. 
Batchelder, collected June 14, 1890, by J. C. Cahoon. 

Characters. — As compared with Dendroica aestiva aestiva, the adult male, 
in breeding plumage, has the back, from crown to upper tail coverts, in- 
cluding scapulars, conspicuously darker green, less yellowish, — between 
‘warbler green ’ and ‘ sulphine yellow ’; the yellow of the forehead is more 
restricted and duller, — in color between ‘ apricot yellow’ and ‘ primuline 
yellow ’; the yellow edges of remiges are narrower, and duller in color, being 
dull ‘ citron yellow’ as contrasted with the ‘ strontian yellow’ of aestiva. 
When seen in series, the yellow of the under parts is duller, less richly golden, 
and the chestnut streaks are darker. In comparison with aestiva, the female 
is duskier, less yellowish, throughout the upper parts. 

Measurements. — Average of fourteen adult males: wing, 61.2; tail, 
42.6; culmen, 11.6; tarsus, 19.4 mm. Average of three adult females: 
wing, 58.0; tail, 42.7; culmen, 11.0; tarsus, 18.7 mf. Ten other birds 
examined were not measured, because they were taken in the moulting 
Season or were immature. 


Remarks. — In general coloring D. ae. amnicola shows a cer- 
tain similarity to D. ae. rubiginosa, but it is readily distinguish- 
able from that race by the yellow forehead which, as in D. ae. 
aestiva, contrasts strongly with the green of the back. With the 
other subspecies of western North America this dark bird needs 
no comparison. 


Ik, 253 


Apri. 5, 1918 Vou. VI, pp. 83-84 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 


VERMILEO COMSTOCKI, SP. NOV., AN INTERESTING 
LEPTID FLY FROM CALIFORNIA. 


BY WILLIAM MORTON WHEELER. 


WHILE camping during August, 1917, with the members of the 
Cornell Biological Expedition in Alta Meadow, near the Sequoia 
Giant Forest in the Sierras of California (alt. 9000 ft.), I became 
much interested in a fly larva which makes funnel-shaped pits 
in the fine sand, like those of ant-lions. Small insects, especially 
ants, tumble into these pits, and are at once seized and killed by 
the larva. Prof. J.C. Bradley informed me that many years ago 
the same insect had been found by Prof. J. H. Comstock in the 
mountains of California, and had been taken to Ithaca, but was 
not reared to the adult stage owing to an accident to the ma- 
terial. Of about two hundred larve which I brought to Boston 
in September, 1917, more than half survived the severe winter, 
and were used for observations which will be recorded in a future 
paper. In structure and behavior the larve were so much like 
those of the famous Vermileo degeert Macq. of southern Europe 
that I was convinced of their generic identity. This conviction 
became a certainty when, on April 1, a female fly emerged in the 
breeding pan. As the larve had been kept in the cold much of 
the winter, it would seem that the time of emergence in their 
native environment must be either April or May. It is probable 
that Osten Sacken and other dipterists have failed to find the 
imago, because they collected in the high Sierras only during the 


84 WHEELER —VERMILEO COMSTOCKI. 


summer months. I take pleasure in dedicating the insect to 
Prof. Comstock, who first called attention to its extraordinary 
larval habits. 


Vermileo comstocki, sp. nov. 


Female. Length 5.5 mm. 

Head from the front nearly twice as broad as high, in profile as long as 
high. Face narrow, about one sixth as broad as the head, rapidly widening 
upward, longitudinally convex in the middle below. First antennal joint 
a little longer than broad, second slightly broader than long, terminal joint 
small, subspherical, slightly acuminate, with a long apical arista which 
tapers only at the tip and is very finely and indistinctly pubescent. Palpi 
subcylindrical, subtruncate at the tip. Proboscis fleshy, half as long as the 
height of the head. Thorax short, seen from above nearly square, behind a 
little broader than the head. Scutellum somewhat flattened. Abdomen as 
broad as the thorax and nearly three times as long, with nine distinct seg- 
ments; the tergites convex transversely near their posterior borders, the 
intersegmental membranes well developed so that the tergites are distinctly 
separated from one another. Wings rather short, narrowed and without 
alule at the base. Venation very similar to that of V. degeeri, but the two 
branches of the third vein are somewhat longer and less divergent and the 
posterior branch is not so close to the fourth vein. The discal cell is as 
broad at the base as at the apex and the anal cell is much more widely open. 
Fore and middle legs rather short and slender, hind legs considerably longer 
and more robust; fore tibize with only a single spur, middle and hind tibie 
each with two prominent spurs. Tarsal claws small, pulvilli very minute. 

Eyes dull olive green; antenne and palpi black; proboscis pinkish, with 
delicate white hairs; face and remainder of head densely gray pollinose. 
Occipital portions of head with numerous short black hairs. These become 
longer and whitish towards the mouth. Thorax covered with the same 
gray pollen as the head, but paler on the pleure; the dorsal surface with a 
pair of narrow median, and a pair of broader lateral, brownish, longitudinal 
stripes, the former not reaching the scutellum. Hairs lacking, except on the 
anterior dorsal surface, where they are black and very short. Abdomen 
with shining black, non-pollinose dorsal and ventral sclerites, the interseg- 
mental and lateral membranes being subopaque and dull pink. Legs, in- 
cluding the cox, of the same color, indistinctly whitish pollinose, the tarsi 
infuscated towards their tips. Tibie and tarsi, especially the middle and 
hind pairs, with numerous minute black hairs. Wings uniformly gray, with 
blackish veins. 


The type is in the Museum of Comparative Zodlogy. 


(4, 253 


June 7, 1918 Vou. VI, PP. 85-86 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 


DESCRIPTION OF A NEW WOODPECKER FROM PERU. 


BY OUTRAM BANGS AND G. K. NOBLE. 


Tue following description of a new woodpecker, taken in 
northwestern Peru by the junior author, is published in advance 
of a paper dealing with the collection of birds that he made in 
that region. This is done at the request of Mr. C. B. Cory, to 
enable him to embody it in the next part of his ‘Catalogue of 
Birds of the Americas,’ due to appear in July. 

The species is named in honor of Professor Theodore Lyman 
of Harvard University, now serving in France, whose generosity 
enabled the Museum of Comparative Zoélogy to codperate with 
the School of Tropical Medicine of Harvard University during 
its Expedition to Peru (July—October, 1916). 


Chrysoptilus atricollis lymani, subsp. nov. 
Six specimens, two immature (cand @) and adults of both sexes, Huan- 
cabamba, August. 


Type, from Huancabamba, northwestern Peru, no. 80,095, M. C. Z., 
adult <7, collected August 18, 1916, by G. K. Noble. 


Characters. — Similar to C. atricollis atricollis (Malh.), but decidedly 
smaller; upper parts brighter and more yellowish, with the black bands 


86 BANGS AND NOBLE— NEW WOODPECKER [aie 


wider; under parts paler, yellower, less olivaceous, —the belly immaculate, 
pale, dull yellow (the belly in true atricollis is narrowly banded). 


MEASUREMENTS (in millimeters). 


M.C.Z, no, Sex and age Wing Tail Tarsus Exposed culmen 
80,095 oad: 114 82 23.0 28 
80,098 o ad. 113 75 23.0 27 
80,100 oad. 118 81 2220 29 
80,096 9 ad. 120 85 21.5 26 


All of the specimens in the series were shot on the tall club- 
shaped cactus which is very common in the valley of the Huan- 
cabamba River. Most of the large clumps of cactus of this arid 
subtropical region show evidence of the depredations of wood- 
peckers, — chiefly this woodpecker. 


263 


OcroBER 31, 1918 Vou. VI, pp. 87-89 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 


NOTES ON THE SPECIES AND SUBSPECIES 
OF PAECILONITTA HKYTON. 


BY OUTRAM BANGS. 


For a long time I have suspected that a much larger form of 
the Bahama duck occupied southern South America, but never 
have had material enough to be certain. Last spring, however, 
when Dr. Leonard C. Sanford and I were in the American 
Museum of Natural History in New York, looking over the 
marvelous series of water birds made by R. H. Beck for the 
Brewster-Sanford Collection, I noticed a fine set of fourteen 
skins of this duck from Argentina. These Dr. Sanford kindly 
allowed me to take home; and, with four from Surinam lent me 
by T. E. Penard, and our own material in the Museum of Com- 
parative Zoology, I was able to bring together a very fair series 
of specimens of the Bahama duck from localities covering in a 
general way its range. 

The Bahama pintail has an extended distribution; it appar- 
ently is absent from the northwestern corner of South America, 
— Venezuela, Colombia and Ecuador, — but it occurs scattered 
over the remainder of the Continent, and throughout the chain 
of the West Indies to the Bahamas, with one record for Florida. 
In the Antilles it occurs in some islands and not in others, 


88 BANGS — THE GENUS PAECILONITTA. 


Jamaica and Cuba being two of the larger islands from which it 
is absent. Specimens from the Guianas and the lower Amazon 
are quite like West Indian examples, and are true Paecilonitta 
bahamensis (Linn.). Those from southern South America, — 
southern Brazil, Paraguay, Argentina, etc.,— though little 
different in color, are much larger, and represent a recognizable 
subspecies for which there are several names. I have seen no 
intergrades, but doubtless these occur in middle Brazil or 
Bolivia. 

The Galapagos pintail, Paecilonitta galapagensis Ridg., has 
by some authors been treated as a species, by others as a sub- 
species of the continental bird. It is so different from P. baha- 
mensis that I much prefer to regard it as an island species. It 
is slightly smaller. The male averages: wing, 202; tail, 76.5; 
tarsus, 38; culmen, 50.5 mm. The female averages: wing, 
185.5; tail, 74; tarsus, 34.5; culmen,46.5mm. In general colora- 
tion it is grayer, less buffy or fawn-color. The under parts are 
less sharply spotted, especially in the female, in which the dusky 
markings have more the appearance of indistinct streaks; the 
cheeks are thickly spotted with dusky, instead of being immac- 
ulate white; the axillars, which in P. bahamensis are plain 
white,! are irregularly spotted or barred with dusky. 

The South American pintail, Dafila spinicauda (Vieill.), I 
unhesitatingly remove from the genus Dafila and place in 
Paecilonitta, as it shares with the members of the latter genus 
a culmen which — viewed in profile —is more concave, less 
straight than in Dafila; a shorter neck; shorter and wider 
rectrices; a close similiarity of color in the sexes; and also the 
same general style of coloration. 

The African P. erythrorhyncha (Gmel.) is perhaps a little 
aberrant in its shorter tail, etc., but on the whole it agrees 
fairly well with the other species of Paecilonitta. 

I should therefore arrange the species and subspecies of 
the genus, as follows: — 


1 Very seldom, in P. bahamensis, — perhaps in immature birds, — some of the axillars 
are somewhat freckled with dusky. 


the BANGS — THE GENUS PAECILONITTA. 89 


1. Paecilonitta bahamensis bahamensis (Linn.). 


Florida, one record;! Bahamas; Greater and Lesser Antilles; 
Guianas and northern Brazil (southern limit of range not 
exactly known). 


Smaller. Average measurements, male: wing, 209; tail, 94.5; tarsus, 
37.5; culmen, 51mm. Female: wing, 197.5; tail, 86; tarsus, 37; culmen, 
50 mm. 


2. Paecilonitta bahamensis rubrirostris (Vieill.). 


N. D., V, p. 108, 1816. Type locality, Buenos Ayres. 
Southern South America, southern Brazil, Paraguay, Argen- 
tina, etc. 


Larger. Average measurements, male: wing, 225; tail, 112.5; tarsus, 
40; culmen, 52mm. Female: wing, 209.5; tail, 96; tarsus, 38; culmen, 
51 mm. (Thirteen specimens, seven males and six females, all from Mar 
del Plata, Argentina, collected by R. H. Beck in September, 1914.) 


3. Paecilonitta galapagensis Ridg. 


Galapagos Islands. 


4. Paecilonitta spinicauda (Vieill.). 


Southern South America. 


5. Paecilonitta erythrorhyncha (Gmel.). 


Africa and Madagascar. 


1 Brooks, Auk, Vol. XXX, p. 110, 1913. Cape Canaveral, Florida, taken by Gardner 
Perry in March, 1912, M.C. Z., no. 60,980. 


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4.463 


OcToBER 31, 1918 Vou. VI, pp. 91-92 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 


A NEW GENUS OF CAPRIMULGIDAE. 


BY OUTRAM BANGS. 


Tue Museum of Comparative Zodlogy has lately received a 
specimen of the rare nightjar, Caprimulgus binotatus Bp., from 
the Rev. George Schwab, who from time to time, for some 
years, has sent us collections from the Cameroons. 

At the time Hartert wrote his monograph of the Caprimul- 
gidze (Das Tierreich, 1897) the species was known only by the 
type in the Leyden Museum, which came from the Gold Coast. 
Since then Mr. G. L. Bates has secured at least two specimens 
(now in the British Museum) from the Cameroons. Bates 
(Ibis, #911, p. 516) thought his last example was rather small, 
as compared with the measurements given by Hartert for the 
type. Our skin (M.C. Z., no. 81,130, adult ¢, Metek, Came- 
roons, February 5, 1917, George Schwab) affords the following 
measurements: wing, 151; tail-feathers, 103; tarsus, 11; ex- 
posed culmen, 7mm. These are almost identical with those of 
the type. 

Ornithologists have always referred to this nightjar as a very 
peculiar species, with no near ally, and well they might. Com- 


pose 


92 BANGS — A NEW GENUS OF CAPRIMULGIDAE. Vol VI 


pared with Caprimulgus europaeus Linn., it is so different that 
it is certainly best placed in a monotypic genus. 


Veles gen. nov. 


Type, Caprimulgus binotatus Bp. 

Characters. — Wing and tail short; closed wing reaching almost to end 
of tail; tail composed of rather narrow feathers, double rounded (the third 
rectrix the longest, 11 mm. longer than outer rectrix, 7 mm. longer than 
middle rectrices), and very boat-shaped. Rictal bristles very small and 
weak. Feet strong, toes stout, middle toe short, about equal without its 
claw to inner and outer toes with claws. Under tail coverts short and 
fluffy. Coloration plain and dark; above, blackish, vermiculated with 
dark rusty brown, scapulars blotched with buffy; beneath, rusty brown, 
vermiculated with blackish, a small patch of silky white feathers on either 
side of throat, tail black and ferruginous in irregular bands and markings 
throughout, inner webs of remiges solid black with no lighter markings. 


/H3 53 


OcToBER 31, 1918 Vou. VI, pp. 93-94 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 


A NEW RACE OF THE BLACK-THROATED GREEN 
WOOD WARBLER. 


BY OUTRAM BANGS. 


Mr. ARTHUR T. WayYNE has lately called my attention to a 
form of the black-throated green wood warbler, which he finds 
breeding locally in certain primeval swamps in the lowlands of 
South Carolina, near Mount Pleasant, in Berkeley County. 
He has sent me seven males for comparison with Northern 
material, and this series proves to represent a form easily dis- 
tinguished from true Dendroica virens (Gmel.). I take great 
pleasure in naming it after the keen ornithologist and excellent 
observer and collector who discovered it, and who noticed its 
peculiarities even without sufficient material with which to 
compare it. 

Mr. Wayne has not yet taken the eggs of this bird, but has 
seen two females in the act of nest-building. The breeding 
Season is early, — the middle of April, — and specimens have 
been shot near Mount Pleasant as early as March 27, — a date 
when true D. virens is still in winter quarters in Mexico or 
Central America. It would thus seem not unlikely that the 
South Carolina form is resident and non-migratory, and I hope 
Mr. Wayne will be able to prove whether or not this is so. I 
have examined all our winter specimens from Mexico and 


Pee 


94 BANGS — A RACE OF DENDROICA VIRENS. Vol. VI 


Central America, some fifty in number, and all are referable to 
the Northern true D. virens. 

Mr. Wayne tells me that, if the old-growth forest is cut in one 
of the tracts inhabited by the South Carolina black-throated 
green wood warbler, it at once disappears entirely from that 
place. 


Dendroica virens waynei subsp. nov. 


Type, from near Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, ¢ adult, no. 81,495, 
coll. Museum of Comparative Zoélogy, collected April 25, 1918, by Arthur 
T. Wayne. (Original no. 6645, coll. A. T. Wayne.) 

Characters. — Similar to true Dendroica virens (Gmel.) but duller in 
general coloration, the black throat patch rather more restricted, especially 
on sides of breast and chest; breast and belly whiter — much less suffused 
with yellowish; upper parts duller, less yellowish olive-green; wing bands 
slightly duller whitish and slightly narrower; sides of head paler yellow. 
Size about the same; bill very small (measurements of a bill so small do 
not convey the same impression that an actual comparison of specimens 
does. The bill of the new form when compared with that of D. virens 
virens appears not more than two thirds as large). 

Measurements. — Seven males: wing, 61-65 (62.5); tail-feathers, 45-47 
(46.0); tarsus, 17-18 (17.5); culmen, 8.5-9.0 (8.8) mm. 


14, 253 


Fesruary 8, 1919 Vou. VI, pp. 95-98 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 


NOTES ON SOUTH AMERICAN SHORT-EARED 
OWLS. 


BY OUTRAM BANGS. 


At my request, Dr. Leonard C. Sanford has kindly lent me 
for study the short-eared owls collected by R. H. Beck in the 
Falkland Islands and Mas-a-Tierra Island, and Dr. F. M. Chap- 
man has put into my hands the entire series from South America 
belonging to the American Museum of Natural History. These, 
combined with the material in the Museum of Comparative 
Zoology, form the basis of the following notes. 

It has been the almost universal custom of ornithologists to 
give the American range of the short-eared owl as ‘‘ North and 
South *America, from the shores of the Arctic Ocean to Pata- 
gonia,’’— or in words to that effect. This is misleading, and not 
entirely correct. I find no record for the short-eared owl from 
anywhere in southern Central America, nor in the vast forested 
regions of northern South America. Even on migration North 
American birds range south only about as far as Guatemala and 
Cuba and occasionally other West Indian Islands (there is one 
skin from St. Bartholomew Island in the Museum of Compara- 
tive Zoédlogy). In South America, except for the very distinct 
local forms in the more northern parts of the country, of which 


96 BANGS — SHORT-EARED OWLS. Boe 


I shall speak later, the short-eared owl is confined to the open 
regions, south of the forest, in temperate southern South 
America. The form of southern South America is thus widely 
separated from the range of the circumpolar Asio flammeus 
flammeus (Pontoppidan) by an enormous extent of country. 

In general appearance the bird of southern South America is 
very similar to Asio flammeus flammeus, but there are slight 
differences that seem to be constant. These, together with its 
isolated position, make me favor recognizing it as a valid sub- 
species, as 


Asio flammeus breviauris (Schlegel). 


Otus breviauris Schlegel, Mus. Pays-Bas, II, no. 11, 4, 1863. Based 
on Otus breviauris Licht., Nomencl. Av., Mus. Berol., 6, 1854, Brazil, 
nomen nudum. 

Distribution. — The whole of southern South America, north, roughly 
speaking, to southern Brazil, southern Bolivia and southern Peru; Mas-a- 
Tierra Island. 

Characters. — Very similar to A. flammeus flammeus, — differing in hav- 
ing a larger bill, though otherwise of about the same size; in color, averaging 
slightly paler above, that is, the dark centres of the feathers are narrower 
and the pale edges wider; under wing-coverts less often spotted with dusky, 
— usually immaculate, — and, when spotted, the spots smaller and fewer. 

Size. — Irrespective of sex.1 Wing, 307 (295-321); tail, 148.5 (140-160) ; 
culmen from cere, 19.6 (18.5-21) mm. Based on eleven adults. 


Five adult birds taken by Beck in Mas-a-Tierra Island are, so 
far as I can see, quite like those from the mainland, and they 
show the same variation in size. 

In the Falkland Islands a smaller and otherwise slightly dif- 
ferent form occurs, which I take great pleasure in naming for 
Dr. Leonard C. Sanford, to whose enthusiasm is due the monu- 
mental collection made by R. H. Beck along the shores and 
among the islands of southern South America. 


1 There is very little if any difference in size in the sexes of the short-eared owl; in the 
large series of A. flammeus flammeus I have measured in this connection the female did 
not average larger than the male, although many of the larger examples were females. 


a8) BANGS — SHORT-EARED OWLS. 97 


1919 


Asio flammeus sanfordi subsp. nov. 


Type, from Sea Lion Island, Falkland Islands, adult ?, original no. 5054, 
Brewster-Sanford Collection in American Museum of Natural History, col- 
lected December 17, 1915, by R. H. Beck. 

Distribution. — The Falkland Islands. 

Characters. — Similar to A. flammeus flammeus and A. f. breviauris, but 
decidedly smaller; tips of longer primaries narrower and more pointed; 
general coloration darker; upper parts, from neck backward, including 
scapulars, wings and their coverts, more mottled, due to the pale markings 
at the sides of the feathers being more irregular in shape. 

Size. — Four adult topotypes, both sexes: wing, 283 (276-288); tail, 
139.5 (136-146); culmen from cere, 17 (16-18) mm. 


Lately another very interesting and strongly marked form 
has been described by Chapman from the Bogoté Savanna: — 


Asio flammeus bogotensis Chapman. 


Asio flammeus bogotensis Chapman, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 
XXXIV, 370, 1915, Bogota Savanna, Colombia. 

Distribution. — The Bogoté Savanna (and high Ecuador ?). 

Characters. — A very distinct subspecies, at once distinguished from the 
other races of Asio flammeus by its general dark coloration and the much 
more uniform brown of the upper parts, with but little ochraceous or 
whitish intermixed. 

Size. — Three adult topotypes: wing, 298.5 (295-303); tail, 141 (140- 
143); culmen from cere, 19 (18-20) mm. 


Nine months after Chapman’s description appeared, Chubb 
named a short-eared owl from high Ecuador, as Aszo galapa- 
goensis aequatorialis (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XXXVI, 46, Feb., 
1916, Pichincha, Ecuador, 11,000 feet altitude). He compared 
his bird only with the peculiar little species of the Galapa- 
gos, — Asio galapagoensis (Gould), — apparently overlooking 


98 BANGS — SHORT-EARED OWLS. 


the Asio flammeus bogotensis Chapman, else he certainly would, 
have made reference to it. I have seen no specimens from 
Ecuador, and so cannot speak positively, but there is nothing 
in Chubb’s diagnosis to distinguish his aequatorialis from bogoten- 
sis. I cannot believe that. aequatorialis, even if different from 
bogotensis, is a subspecies of the extraordinary island species 
Asio galapagoensis, which has cross-barred, as well as striped, 
underparts, and has broadly streaked legs. 


\4Y,ass 


Marcu 21, 1919 Vou. VI, pp. 99-114 


PROCEEDINGS 


OF THE 


NEW ENGLAND ZOOLOGICAL CLUB 


SOME UNDESCRIBED SPHINGIDAE. 


BY BENJAMIN PRESTON CLARK. 


At the end of another year! I have a number of Sphingidae 
which appear to be undescribed, and to deserve recognition as 
species or subspecies. Six of these are North American; one is 
from the West Indies; five are from Central and South America; 
two are African. In addition to these there are six species, of 
which heretofore but one sex has been described, and of which I 
now have material that enables me to describe the other sex. 

I desire to make the following corrections in my previous 
papers, and also to offer a suggestion as to one subspecies of 
Rothschild and Jordan. 

I find that Orecta fruhstorferi? Clark is in every respect like 
a drawing of the female of O. lycidas, which I have received from 
Tring. It is the first good drawing of this latter species, which 
I have seen. A series of specimens, in which I had supposed 
both O. l. eos and O. 1. lycidas to be represented, while it shows 
wide variation in wing form, consists evidently wholly of eos. I 
wish therefore to express a doubt as to the soundness of O. 
fruhstorferi. Iwas misled by the only available drawings. 


1 See Proc. N. E. Zoél. Club, VI, pp. 57-72. 
2 Proc. N. E. Zodl. Club, VI, p. 45; pl. V, fig. 4. 


100 CLARK — SOME UNDESCRIBED SPHINGIDAE = [PV :2.2.C- 


Amplypterus palmeri brasiliensis! Clark is, I think, not a 
good subspecies. A longer series fails to show distinguishing 
marks from the northern form. 

The specimen of Pholus satellitia intermedia Clark, figured in 
these Proceedings (Vol. VI, Plate IX, fig. 1), is a female, not a 
male. 

Oxyambulyx substrigilis wilemani R. and J. (Novitates Zo- 
ologicae, XXIII, p. 254, 1916) seems to be wrongly classed as a 
subspecies. One hesitates to question any name given from 
Tring, but O. substriglis staudingeri Roths. occurs from Manila, 
the type locality of wilemanz, and two subspecies of one species 
cannot be expected to occur in the same locality. Should not 
the form be known as Oxyambulyx wilemani ? 

It is still my belief that further investigation of the moun- 
tains of Mexico, and of South America as a whole, will add many 
new Sphingid forms. In this connection I wish to call especial 
attention to the new Gurelca here described from northern 
Mexico. This genus, heretofore, has been found only in the 
Eastern Hemisphere. 


Protoparce brontes smythi subsp. nov. 
Plate X, figure 1. 


Al. ant. long., 9, 47 mm. Al. ant. lat., 9, 22 mm. Marg. ext., 9, 
28 mm. 

Habitat.—Rio Piedras, Porto Rico. One male in coll. B. Preston Clark 

I have no specimen of P. brontes cubensis from Porto Rico, but this species 
has been noted from that island by Dewitz, Moschler, and Gundlach. The 
specimen here described is different in its general coloration and wing shape 
from P. b. brontes, P. b. cubensis, and P. b. haitensis. It is a broader- 
winged insect, and the general tone of the thorax, abdomen above, and 
fore wing, is light brown with dark brown markings, while the three other 
forms from Cuba, Jamaica, and Haiti, are white to gray, with black mark- 
ings. The dark semicircular area, with its base on the costal margin, so 
prominent in the three other forms, is, in this specimen from Porto Rico, 
of the same color as the rest of the fore wing. In general the coloration of 


1 Proc. N. E. Zoél. Club, VI, p. 44; pl. IV, fig. 3. 


March1] CLARK — SOME UNDESCRIBED SPHINGIDAE 101 


the fore wing is much more uniform than in the other races, and at the same 
time the dark brown markings are more distinct than in the other forms. 
The postmedian undulate band extending from the costal to the inner 
margin is broad, — 8 mm. at the costal margin, narrowing to 5 mm. at the 
inner margin, — and is very clearly defined in its outlines. The hind wing 
also is brown instead of black, as in the other forms. While these differ- 
ences are very marked, and may result in the separation of this form as a 
distinct species, still, until I have actually seen a specimen of P. brontes 
cubensis from Porto Rico, I prefer to consider this a subspecies of brontes. 


Protoparce schausi sp. nov. 
Plate X, figure 2. 


Al. ant. long., o’, 48 mm.; 9, 64 mm. Al. ant. lat., 1, 20 mm.; 9, 
27mm. Marg. ext., 1, 28mm.; 9, 38 mm. 

Habitat. — San Jose, Costa Rica, one male, Sept., 1903, collected by P. 
Biolley, received in exchange from Dr. William J. Holland of the Carnegie 
Museum. Iguala, Guatemala, one male. Tula and Juan Vinas, Costa 
Rica, one male and one female. The three latter specimens were given me 
by William Schaus, who collected them. Three males and one female in 
coll. B. Preston Clark. 

This species is intermediate between P. lichenea and P. florestan. Its 
general maculation is like both these species. But while its general colora- 
tion on the body and fore wing is gray with a green tinge, like P. florestan, 
the fore wing above is darker in tint — especially the semicircular median 
area on the costal margin, which is often so prominent in florestan. The 
fore wing is narrower than in florestan, and like lichenea in form, having the 
same concavity on the distal margin anterior to the hinder angle. Stigma 
minute, much smaller than in either florestan or lichenea. I should hesitate 
to separate this form, were it not that the four specimens show the same 
distinctly marked characteristics. 


Chlaenogramma obscura Clark. 
Plate X, figure 3. 


Al. ant. long., o’, 38mm. Al. ant. lat., 7,15 mm. Marg. ext., o’, 21 mm. 

Habitat. — La Rioja, Argentina. Two males in coll. B. Preston Clark, 
received from my friend, Dr. Eugenio Giacomelli. 

The description of the female of this species (Proc. N. E. Z. C., Vol. VI, 
p. 48, 1916) applies to these males. Both of the latter are somewhat worn, 


Eek 


102 CLARK — SOME UNDESCRIBED SPHINGIDAE VoL vi 


and the markings are thus less distinct. The abdomens of the male speci- 
mens are, however, in better condition than that of the female. The ab- 
domen is light brown, not dark brown, and is irrorated with white scales. 
It has dark brown side spots, and has transverse dark brown bands at the 
junction of the abdominal segments. 


Lapara halicarniae (Strecker). 
Plate XI, figure 1. 


Sphinx halicarnie Strecker, Bull. Brooklyn Entomological Society, III, 
1880, p. 35, figure. 


The type specimen of Lapara halicarniae (Strecker) is, I 
think, a hypertrophied female. Some years ago Dr. William J. 
Holland suggested in the ‘ Moth Book’ (1903, p. 53) that this 
type specimen was a hypertrophied female, and there are two 
facts which indicate the soundness and wisdom of his suggestion. 


1. Other specimens collected at and near the type locality of halicarniae 
(Enterprise, Florida) are like it in all respects, save in the wing form, 
which in the type of halicarniae is bombycid, and in the color, which 
I believe to be faded, as are many of the specimens in the Strecker 
collection. 


2. A female of Protoparce sexta sexta from Ohio has identically the same 
wing form as the type of halicarniae, strongly bombycid. 


Mr. William Schaus, Mr. Andrey N. Avinoff and Mr. Jacob 
Doll are all in agrement with me as to the hypertrophied char- 
acter of the type. In Plate XIII, figure 1, I have reproduced 
the type specimen of halicarniae; in Plate XI, figure 1, a normal 
specimen of what I believe to be the same form; and in Plate 
XIII, figure 2, an outline of the bombycid specimen of Protoparce 
sexta sexta. A description of the normal form follows. 


Al. ant. long., o’', 24 mm.; 9,40 mm. AL. ant. lat., 7%, 13 mm.; @, 
16mm. Marg. ext., oo, 18 mm.; ?, 21 mm. 

Habitat. — Fort Schuyler, Enterprise, and Charlotte Harbor, Florida. 
A series of six males and eight females in coll. B. Preston Clark. 


Maren?1] CLARK — SOME UNDESCRIBED SPHINGIDAE 103 


This species is distinct from Lapara coniferarum. It is a 
much larger insect. The markings of the fore wing are fainter, 
and often so vestigial that the wing is unicolorous, lacking even 
the two longitudinal postcellular dashes. These differences 
become very evident as one compares series of the two forms. 
The genitalia also are entirely different. 


Pseudoclanis karschi R. and J. 
Plate XI, figure 2. 


Al, ant. long., co’, 52 mm. Al. ant. lat., &, 18 mm. Marg. ext., o’, 
25 mm. 

Habitat. — Lolodorf, Cameroons, West Africa. One male, in coll. B. 
Preston Clark, collected by A. I. Good, received in exchange from the 
Carnegie Museum, Pittsburg, Pa. 

The male of this remarkable species has not heretofore, I think, been 
described, although the female was described by Rothschild and Jordan 
fifteen years ago (Revision of the Sphingidae, p. 220). 

The coloration of the male is in all respects like that of the female. The 
remarkable feature of the male is the shape of the fore wing. The costal 
margin runs from the base almost straight, very slightly convex; but at a 
point 12 mm. from the apex the margin curves sharply posteriorly. The 
apex of the wing is rounded, and 1 mm. in width. The distal margin is in- 
cised very sharply from the wing apex, at first following the line of SC5; 
it is then scalloped to R1, where it is bluntly angled. The distal margin 
is again deeply scalloped between R1 and R2, and scalloped less deeply 
between the other veins, to M2. Hinder angle rounded. The distance from 
the angle on R3 to the apex of the fore wing, in a direct line, which really 
measures the faleate portion of the wing, is 15 mm. 

The hind wing is sharply pointed at the apex, the distal margin is slightly 
wavy, and the hinder angle rounded. I know of no Sphingid with such a 
singularly shaped fore wing. 


104 CLARK — SOME UNDESCRIBED SPHINGIDAE § [Py civic" 


Sphinx dolli engelhardti subsp. nov. 
Plate XI, figure 3. 


Al. ant. long., o#', 25 mm.; 9, 26 mm. AI. ant. lat., 7,9 mm; Q, 
9.5mm. Marg., ext., o',14mm.; 9, 14.5 mm. 

Habitat. — Bellevue, Washington Co., Utah, 4000 ft. alt. Three males 
and one female, June 27, 1917, in coll. B. Preston Clark; one male in coll. 
Brooklyn Museum. 


Some years ago Mr. George P. Engelhardt took a male of 
Sphinx dolli in Bellevue, Utah. It is now in the Brooklyn 
Museum of Arts and Sciences. It was supposed at the time to 
be S. dolli dolli. In the summer of 1917 Mr. Jacob Doll and 
Mr. George P. Engelhardt went to Utah, the special object of 
the trip being to rediscover Sphinz dolli. They took four speci- 
mens, three males and one female, which on examination prove 
to be a hitherto undescribed form of dolli, to which I have 
given Mr. Engelhardt’s name. 


This Utah form is midway between coloradus and dolli. The head and 
thorax are light gray, in contrast to coloradus, in which the patagiae are 
dark brown, bordered with a black line, outside which is a narrow white 
line. The thoracic marking of dolli are similar to those of coloradus, but 
are dark gray where coloradus is brown. The abdomen of engelhardti is 
light gray, the fringe of tergites brown; abdominal side patches dark gray, 
but not prominent as are the side patches in both dolli and coloradus. The 
antennae are lighter in color than in the other two forms. 

The fore and hind wings above are uniformly gray, there not being the 
contrast in color between the whitish light-colored costal area of coloradus 
and the darker posterior area. The ground tone is darker than in dolli. 
The dark submarginal line R2—M2 occurs in this form, but is less marked 
than in coloradus. The dark markings, so prominent in the fore wing of 
-coloradus, are much fainter in the Utah form, though more prominent than 
in dolli, in which they ‘are vestigial. 

The fore and hind wings below are gray, like dolli, and unlike the brown 
tone of coloradus. 


Maren 1] CLARK — SOME UNDESCRIBED SPHINGIDAE 105 


Dolba hylaeus floridensis subsp. nov. 
Plate XI, figure 4. 


Al. ant. long., #7, 26 mm.; 9,32 mm. Al. ant. lat., 7, 11mm.; 9, 
14mm. Marg. ext., 7, 14 mm.; 9, 19 mm. 

Habitat. — Parish, Florida. Four males and three females in coll. B. 
Preston Clark. 

The Florida specimens of D. hylaeus differ markedly from the Northern 
race, in that they all show less contrast between the dark and light mark- 
ings of both fore and hind wing above. The sharply white markings of the 
Northern form become, in the Southern race, gray and more indistinct. 

The difference on the under side of both fore and hind wings is still more 
marked. The geminate postmedian line of the fore wing below, bordered 
posteriorly with a white hand, becomes in the Florida form vestigial, the 
wing being brown, unicolorous. The hind wing below also is brown, uni- 
colorous, save for a faint postmedian band parallel to the distal margin 
and an irregular longitudinal white area parallel to the anal margin. 


These differences are well marked, and their occurrence adds 
one more form to the group of Sphingidae occurring in the Gulf 
States and westward. 


Smerinthus cerisyi ophthalmica ab. nigrescens 
Plate XI, figure 5. 


Al. ant. long., 7, 29 mm.; 9, 34mm. AI. ant. lat., 7,13 mm.; 9, 
15mm. Marg. ext.,.o‘,16mm.; 9, 18 mm. 

Habitat. — Mission San José, California, 1500 ft. alt., May, 1917. Three 
males and three females in coll. B, Preston Clark. 

This series was raised from larvae, except one which came to a light. 

The ground tone of the fore wing above is dark olive brown, the lighter 
shading being silvery gray. The coloring of the hind wing above is darker 
than the normal form, the pink area is less extended than in pallidulus, 
while the circular blue marking, so prominent in the other forms of cerisyt, 
is here very faint and only 3 mm. in diameter. The ground tone of both 
wings beneath is dark olive brown, with the lighter shading silvery gray, as 
on the upper side. 

It is a shorter-winged insect than f. pallidulus. 


Bae 


106 CLARK — SOME UNDESCRIBED SPHINGIDAE Vol VI 


Isognathus rimosa brasiliensis subsp. nov. 


Plate XII, figure 1. 


Al. ant. long., o, 40 to 42 mm. AI. ant. lat., 7, 15 to 16mm. Marg. 
ext., o’, 22 to 23 mm. 

Habitat. — Mogy Forest, Sao Paulo (E. May); Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. 
Two males in coll. B. Preston Clark. 

This form is very close to J. rimosa papayae. The fore wing above, how- 
ever, is less strongly marked, and more uniformly gray. The ground tone 
is not white. The second discal line on under side of hind wing is less promi- 
nent than in papayae, and there are traces of the first discal line. The ab- 
dominal bands are less distinct than in the other forms of this species. 


Isognathus mossi sp. nov. 


Plate XII, figure 2. 


Al. ant. long., o', 36 mm.; 9, 41 mm. AI. ant. lat., ¢, 15 mm.; 9, 
17mm. Marg. ext., o',20mm.; 9, 22 mm. 

Habitat. — Manaos, Brazil. Two males and one female in coll. B. Pres- 
ton Clark. Named for my friend, Rev. A. Miles Moss, who collected them 
and presented them to me. He raised them from the larvae, which he 
caught on the bank of the Amazon River. 

A clearly marked and very beautiful species, resembling most nearly 
I. menechus, but with the thorax, abdomen above and beneath, ground color 
of both fore wing and hind wing, above and beneath, all much darker in 
tone. 

Antennae brown above, white beneath. Palpus warm brown, irrorated 
with white. Occiput, thorax and abdomen above, brown-gray, slightly irro- 
rated with white. Abdominal bands black, distinct. . 

Fore wing above: Brown-gray, irrorated with white, uniform in tint. 
Geminate basal dots gray, inconspicuous. Antemedian pair of transverse 
black lines disappearing before they reach the inner margin. Three black 
antemedian spots, 1 mm. in diameter, and three postmedian spots of the 
same size, all on costal margin, the three latter extended in wavy lines which 
approach one another on R1. The black half-ring of J. menechus is present, 
though less prominent. White discal vein dots barely noticeable. 


Mart). | | CLARK — SOME UNDESCRIBED SPHINGIDAE 107 


1919 


Hind wing above: Basal area orange. Black distal band, 10 mm. in 
width at the costal margin, narrowing gradually to 5 mm. on M2, where it 
narrows abruptly and extends narrowly to the anal angle; obscurely irro- 
rated with white along the distal margin. Faint gray geminate line at 
hinder angle parallel to distal margin, and included in the marginal band. 

Fore wing beneath: Brown-gray, yellow toward inner margin. Sub- 
marginal lunulate dark line extends from a point on the costal margin 
11 mm. from the apex, to a point on the inner margin 5 mm. from the hinder 
angle. This line accentuated by black vein dots. Parallel to it, at a dis- 
tance of 4 mm., extends a faint postmedian lunulate dark line. An obscure 
white patch on costal margin on each side of the submarginal line. Cilia 
prominently white at the veins. 

Hind wing beneath: Similar in color to fore wing. A dark lunulate line 
extends from a point on the costal margin 7 mm. from the apex to a point 
3 mm. from the distal margin at the anal angle. Inside this line extending 
from the anal margin to R2, is an orange area, extending to the base of the 
wing. Second and third discal lines extend obscurely from costal margin 
to the orange area. 


Cautethia yucatana sp. nov. 
Plate XII, figure 3. 


Al ant: long, 9, 16 mm: Al. ant. lat., 9, 7.5 mm. ‘Marg. ext., 9, 
8 mm. 

Habitat. — Izamal, Yucatan. One male and one female in coll. B. Pres- 
ton Clark, taken by George F. Gaumer. 

While I have not examined the genital armature of this form, I have 
no doubt that it is a distinct species. It is closely allied to C. spuria, The 
yellow basal area of the hind wing is as pale as in that form, and the ground 
tone of the fore wing is of the same smoky gray color. In both these re- 
spects it differs from C. grotei and from C. noctuiformis, in each of which the 
basal area of the hind wing is orange and the fore wing above is lighter in 
color. The black marginal band of the hind wing above extends almost to 
the cell. It differs from C. spuria in being a distinctly smaller form. The 
markings of the fore wing above are less prominent. The basal area is 
lighter in color. A dark band extends from the hinder angle of the fore 
wing obliquely basad; it narrows, and then continues obscurely to the 
median point of the costal margin. This band is similar to that in C. noctui- 
formis. In C. spuria this line is replaced by a broader triangular patch, 
with its base at the hinder angle, and its apex on M2, and running less 
obliquely to the inner margin, thus forming a wider angle. 


108 CLARK — SOME UNDESCRIBED SPHINGIDAE [Py 22.0. 


Perigonia lusca bahamensis subsp. nov. 
Plate XII, figure 4. 


Al. ant. long., o’, 29mm.; 9, 31 mm. Al. ant., lat., #, 11.5 mm.; 9, 
12mm. Marg. ext., o',16mm.; 9,17 mm. 

Habitat.— Andros Island, Bahamas. Males and females in coll. B. 
Preston Clark, taken by W. M Mann, July, 1917. 

The Bahaman form of P. lusca is larger than the other West Indian forms 
of this species. The light shading on the fore wing above, of the basal 
area, of the undulate postmedian line, and of the distal marginal area, gray 
in f. interrupta Walker, has, in this form, a bluish tinge. The same is true 
of the patch at the hinder angle of the hind wing above. The yellow area 
at the anal angle of the hind wing above is much more marked than in f, 
interrupta, to which this form is closely allied. The ground tone of both 
the fore wing and the hind wing below, gray in f. interrupta, is distinctly 
rufous in the Bahama individuals. 

While in its general maculation this form is very close to f. interrupta, its 
size, which appears to be uniformly greater in a considerable series, as well 
as the marked differences in color above noted, seem to justify subspecific 
separation. 


Gurelca sonorensis sp. nov. 
Plate XII, figure 5. 


Al. ant. long., o',17 mm. Al. ant. lat., 7,7 mm. Marg. ext., 7, 7mm, 

Habitat. — Copete Mine, thirty miles east of Carbo, Sonora, Mexico, 
One male in coll. B. Preston Clark, collected by Dr. F. C. Nicholas, August, 
1915. 

This is a remarkable form, and marks the first occurrence of the genus 
Gurelca in the Western Hemisphere. Through personal conversation with 
Dr. Nicholas I have verified the locality. 

Palpus projecting, terminal surface triangular, almost quadrangular; 
scales at apex of first segment prolonged laterally, forming a kind of fan; 
brown. In all respects typical of the genus. Antenna (only the left 
present, and that broken) brown, compressed, filiform. Thorax and ab- 
domen above, light brown; dark brown lateral patches on tergites. Ab- 
domen below, yellow-brown, irrorated with dark brown. Minute white 
lateral patches at the base of segments 4 to 6. 

Fore wing above: Light brown with darker markings. Elongate basal 
patch 2 mm. in length. Dark antemedian line extending obscurely from a 


Mareh 21] CLARK — SOME UNDESCRIBED SPHINGIDAE 109 


point on costal margin one third the distance from the base to the apex, 
to the inner margin, which it reaches at a point 4 mm. distant from the base 
of the wing. A median line extends from a point on the costal margin, 
slightly nearer the apex than the base, diagonally to the inner margin, 
which it reaches at a point midway from the base to the hinder angle. This 
line contains within itself near the costal margin a light elongate dot. Pos- 
teriorly of M1 and between the median line and the hinder angle, are sev- 
eral sharply angled sagittate lines, with their apices basad. Light brown 
shade at hinder angle. A submarginal line runs from a point 4 mm. dis- 
tant from the apex on the costal margin irregularly to the hinder angle. 
A light shade between this line and the distal margin, extending 1.5 mm. 
from the apex. Cilia long, brown. 

Fore wing below: Light brown, save for a dark brown irregular distal 
marginal band, extending deeply basad on R2, and curving basad between 
M1 and hinder angle. Light yellow line, 2.5 mm. in length, extends from 
a point close to costal margin, and midway between the base and the apex, 
diagonally basad toward inner margin. A light yellow area runs basad of 
the distal margin except at the incised angle. Fore wing is rounded at the 
apex, in marked contrast with the sharp tip of the other four species. Dis- 
tal margin slightly convex from SC5 to R3, lobed on M1 and at hinder 
angle, again contrasted with the sharp hinder angle of the other species. 

Hind wing above: Basal area yellow. Distal margin dark brown. Mar- 
ginal area 4.5 mm. wide at the inner margin and 3 mm. wide at anal angle. 
This marginal area is dentate between the veins, its outline being thus ir- 
regular. A whitish area at the anal angle, bisected by a narrow dark line 
parallel to the distal margin, and running just within the dark distal mar- 
gin to the inner margin. Cilia brown, white between the veins. 

Hind wing below: Light yellow save for the distal margin, which is 
dark brown, 4.5 mm. wide at the inner margin, and tapering to a point at 
the anal angle. Basad of the distal band, and 1.5 mm. distant from it, runs 
a narrow dark line. Within the cell is a dark brown triangular area, bor- 
dered posteriorly with white. The inner margin of the hind wing is very 
strongly convex toward the base, as in the other species. 


Temnora avinoffi sp. nov. 
Plate XII, figure 6. 


Al. ant. long., o, 24 mm. Al. ant. lat., o, 11 mm. Marg. ext., o, 
13 mm. 

Habitat.—Fulasi, Cameroons, West Africa. One male in coll. B. Preston 
Clark, collected by A. I. Good, received in exchange from the Carnegie 
Museum, Pittsburg, Pa. 


110 CLARK — SOME UNDESCRIBED SPHINGIDAE— [?).240- 


Named for my friend Andrey N. Avinoff, who corrected my impression 
that the specimen was a Hypaedalia. 

Palpus light brown, shading to dark brown at the base. Antennae dark 
brown. Thorax and abdomen mummy-brown above, light brown beneath. 

Fore wing above: Mummy-brown. A narrow, straight dark line extends 
from a point on the costal margin slightly basad of its median point, to M2 
which it reaches 2 mm. from the distal margin. From M2 this line curves 
basad, reaching the inner margin 2 mm. from the hinder angle. An irregu- 
lar marginal distal band 6 mm. wide at the apex, narrowing abruptly to 
3 mm. on SC5, then broadening to 5 mm. on R2, and narrowing again to 
2 mm. at the hinder angle. This band is slightly darker than the area be- 
tween it and the median line. Distal margin irregular in outline, scalloped 
between the veins; outline very similar to that cf T. wallastoni. Hinder 
angle projecting, rounded. Cilia dark brown. 

Hind wing above: Black, unicolorous. Cilia light yellow, black at the 
veins. 

Fore wing below: Basal area black to a point slightly beyond the median 
point on the costal margin, and to a point about two thirds the distance to 
the hinder angle on the inner margin. Obscure white stigma near apex of 
cell. Apical area light brown. Irregular submarginal distal line correspond- 
ing to that on upper side; faintly geminate from R3 to hinder angle. 

Hind wing below: Light brown. Three wavy, faint dark brown lines, 
one median, the second postmedian, and the third submarginal, parallel to 
each other, and approximately so to the distal margin. Marginal band 
slightly darker than the tone of the wing, extending from the apex to M2. 
The shape of this band is broadly lunar. This species is allied to 7. wal- 
lastonit R. and J. 


Temnora brunescens sp nov. 
Plate XII, figure 7. 


Al. ant. long., 9, 20 mm. Al. ant. lat., 9, 10 mm. Marg. ext., 9, 
12 mm. 

Habitat. — West Pondoland, South Africa. One female in coll. B. Pres- 
ton Clark, received from Mr. E. LeMoult, Paris. 

Antennae brown. Thorax and abdomen above, warm brown with a purp- 
lish tinge. Thorax crested. Palpi brown-purple, third segment white. Eye 
with white lashes. Abdomen beneath brown-purple; with minute white 
side tufts. 

Fore wing above: red-brown with purplish tinge. A triangular dark 
red-brown area with its base, 3 mm. in width, on the costal margin, and its 
inner edge 12 mm. from the base, extends to the distal margin, where it 
narrows to a point on M1. The area between this triangle and the apex 


1919 CLARK — SOME UNDESCRIBED SPHINGIDAE 111 


March | 
is of a lighter brown color than the rest of the wing, making the dark red- 
brown triangular area more distinctly marked apically. The distal margin 
is of a curious outline, strongly lobed at the veins. It is strongly concave 
from a lobe on SC5 to R3 where it is strongly lobed, and within this con- 
cavity it is weakly lobed on R1 and R2. It is again strongly lobed on M1, 
weakly so on M2, and the lobe at the hinder angle is so strongly and bluntly 
produced that the inner margin is deeply concave. The general outline of 
the distal margin is like 7. zantus apiciplaga. Cilia brown. The tips of 
both fore wings are broken off. Minute white stigma at apex of cell. 

Hind wing above: dark brown, unicolorous. Cilia white, dark at the 
veins. Distal margin concave between the veins. 

Fore wing beneath: mummy-brown, unicolorous; darker toward the 
base and hinder margin. Minute white stigma on cell. Narrow, indistinct, 
irregular, dark brown submarginal band. 

Hind wing beneath: Mummy-brown, unicolorous. A narrow, geminate, 
indistinct, irregular, dark brown band runs roughly parallel to the distal 
margin. 


Protoparce barnesi sp. nov. 
Plate XIII, figure 3. 


Al. ant. long., 9, 60 mm. AI. ant. lat., 9, 23 mm. Marg. ext., 9, 
34 mm. . 

Habitat. — Escuintla, Guatemala. One female in coll. B. Preston Clark, 
collected, July, 1917, by my friends William Schaus and J. T. Barnes, and 
given me by them. Taken on an electric light pole. 

This species is allied to P. franciscae Clark, and more closely to P. flores- 
tan; but it is longer-winged than the latter. 

Fore wing above: Ground tone white, with no green tinge. Black discal 
streaks R3—M2 lacking. The markings are all faint, and the semicircular 
median area on costal margin, often so pronounced in P. florestan, is en- 
tirely lacking. Stigma lacking. 

Hind wing above: Black, irrorated with white toward anal angle. Cilia 
white, black at the veins. The apical line, so deeply curved basad, between 
the apex and SC5, in franciscae and florestan, is much less so in this species. 

Fore wing below: Unicolorous, brown. Cilia white, brown at the veins. 
Very narrow distal black marginal band, slightly undulate between the 
veins. 

Hind wing below: Brown. Basal third of the wing heavily irrorated 
with white. Two broad whitish bands, indefinite in outline, one median, 
the other postmedian, parallel to the distal margin, but turning slightly 
basad as they approach the inner margin. 


112 CLARK — SOME UNDESCRIBED SPHINGIDAE [PF ZC. 


Calasymbolus myops occidentalis subsp. nov. 
Plate XIII, figure 4. 


Al. ant. long., o', 26 mm.; 9, 31 mm. Al. ant. lat., o', 11 mm.; 9, 
12mm. Marg. ext., 7, 14mm.; 9, 16 mm. 

Habitat. — Glenwood Springs and Boulder, Colorado. One male and 
one female in coll. B. Preston Clark, given me by Dr. William Barnes and 
Mr. T. A. D. Cockerell. 

This form is much lighter in color throughout than the Eastern individ- 
uals. The ground tone of both wings, above and beneath, is light yellowish 
brown, irrorated with pink. The central dot of the spot on the hind wing is 
pale blue, and smaller than in the typical form. The scalloped markings 
of both wings below, which in the Eastern form are blue shading to pink, 
in the Colorado specimens are light pink shading to white. There is a much 
sharper contrast in color between the light and dark portions of both fore 
and hind wing above, and less contrast on the under sides of both wings, 
than in the typical form. The distal margin of the fore wing between SC5 
and M1 is more convex than in the typical form. The light submarginal 
lines on the fore wing are also slightly farther from the distal margin. 


Sphinx dolli dolli Neumoegen. 


Al. ant. long., 9, 27 mm. Al. ant. lat.. 9, 10 mm. Marg. ext., 9, 
15 mm. 

Habitat. — Yavapai Co., Arizona. One female in coll. B. Preston Clark. 

This specimen was taken by Mr. O. Buchholz on July 9, many years ago, 
and came from him to my collection in 1918. 

It is in all respects similar to the male, except that the markings are 
somewhat less distinct. The antennae are light-colored above, and dark 
below, instead of being dark-colored both above and below, as in the male. 


Monarda oryx Druce. 


Al. ant. long., 9, 35 mm. Al. ant. lat., 9, 17 mm. Marg. ext., 2, 
22 mm. 

Habitat. — Mexico. One female in coll. B. Preston Clark. 

The male was described from Jalisco, Mexico, in 1896, but I know of no 
description of the female. The single specimen which I have, was given 
me in exchange by the Brooklyn Museum of Arts and Sciences. 


Marc!]| | CLARK — SOME UNDESCRIBED SPHINGIDAE 113 


The maculation and general characteristics are in all respects like those 
of the male, except the antennae. These are shorter, less than one third 
the length of the fore wing, slender, filiform, light brown. 


Xylophanes maculator wolfi Druce. 


Al. ant. long., 2, 388 mm. Al. ant. lat., 9, 16 mm. Marg. ext., 9, 
19 mm. 

Habitat. — Manaos, Brazil. This female was taken by my friend, Rev. 
A. Miles Moss, March 5, 1917, a thousand miles up the Amazon. It is a 
perfect specimen. 

Its markings are in all respects similar to a drawing made of one of the 
males in the Tring Museum. Proximally of the main line of the fore wing 
there is much more uniformity of color than in X. maculator, and the con- 
trast is stronger between the uniform light coloring of the proximal portion 
of the fore wing and the portion lying posteriorly of the main line. This 
contrast is especially marked toward the hinder angle where the fore wing 
is very dark. This point of difference from X. maculator has not, I think, 
been previously noted. 


Euproserpinus euterpe Edw. 


Al. ant. long., 2,17 mm. Al. ant. lat., 9,7mm. Marg. ext., 2,11 mm. 

Habitat. — Southern California. One female in coll. B. Preston Clark, 
given me by my friend Jacob Doll, and received by him through C. V. 
Riley in 1888. 


Edwards’ description of H. euterpe is remarkably fine. There 
are a few points, however, which may well be stated. 


One type is a male, though spoken of as a female. 

The ground tone of the female specimen, as well as that of a male in my 
collection, is brown, while that of H#. phaeton is black. There is less con- 
trast between the marginal discal band of the fore wing than in phaeton, 
and the band itself is more deeply incised. 

The abdomen, in both the male and the female, has pale side tufts. 
These are much less marked in the male, and this is true also of phaeton. 

The antennae of the male of ewterpe are, as noted by Edwards, of equal 
size throughout, and not clubbed as in phaeton. They are also slightly 
longer, The antennae of the female of euterpe are markedly longer than 


114 CLARK — SOME UNDESCRIBED SPHINGIDAE [PB Z.C- 


in phaeton, being 9 mm. in length; they are more slender, and very slightly 
clubbed, while those of the female of phaeton are strongly clubbed, as in the 
male. 

The marginal band of the hind wing in the female of euterpe is less mark- 
edly convex than in the male. 


This sphingid is evidently very rare. Several collectors 
searching for a number of years have failed to rediscover it. 


DESCRIPTION OF PLATES. 


PLATE X. 


Figure 1. Protoparce brontes smythi subsp. nov. Female. 
Figure 2. Protoparce schausi sp. nov. Male. 
Figure 3. Chlaenogramma obscura Clark. Male. 


PuatTe XI. 


Figure 1. Lapara halicarniae (Strecker). Female. 

Figure 2. Pseudoclanis karschi R. and J. Male. 

Figure 3. Sphina dolli engelhardti subsp. nov. Male. 

Figure 4. Dolba hylaeus floridensis subsp. nov. Female. 

Figure 5. Smerinthus cerisyi ophthalmica ab. nigrescens. Female. 


Puate XII. 


Figure 1. Jsognathus rimosa brasiliensis subsp. nov. Male. 
Figure 2. Jsognathus mossi sp. nov. Male. 

Figure 3. Cautethia yucatana sp. nov. Female. 

Figure 4. Perigonia lusca bahamensis subsp. nov. Female. 
Figure 5. Gurelca sonorensis sp. nov. Male. 

Figure 6. Temnora avinoffi sp. nov. Male. 

Figure 7. Temnora brunescens sp. nov. Female. 


Puate XIII. 


Figure 1. Lapara halicarniae Strecker. Female. Type. 

Figure 2. Protoparce sexta sexta Johansson. Outline of hypertrophied 
female. 

Figure 3. Protoparce barnesi sp. nov. Female. 

Figure 4. Calasymbolus myops occidentalis subsp. nov. Female. 


INDEX 


In references to subspecies the name of the species is omitted. New scientific names 


are in heavy-faced type. 


Aauata gyroloides, 73, 75. 
peruviana, 73, 75. 

Allen, G. M., a third species of 
Chilonycteris from Cuba, 1; an 
extinct Cuban Capromys, 53. 

Amplypterus brasiliensis, 44, 50, 

100; pl. IV, fig. 3. 
dentoni, 44, 50, 57; pl. V, fig. 1. 
gannascus, 57. 

Anthus phillipsi, 26. 

Arctonotus vega, 68. 

Argentina, Buenos Ayres, 89. 

La Rioja, 101. 
Mar del Plata, 89. 
Santiago del Estero, 43. 

Arizona, Buckman Canyon, 34. 

Santa Catalina Mts., 34. 
Yavapai Co., 112. 

Asio aequatorialis, 97. 
bogotensis, 97, 98. 
breviauris, 96. 
flammeus, 95-98. 
galapagoensis, 97, 98. 
sanfordi, 97. 

Avinoff, A. N., 40, 102. 


Banamas, Abaco Isd., 23. 

Andros Isd., 23, 57, 108. 
Nassau, 41. 

Baker, C. F., 12, 18. 

Bangs, O., the smaller mockingbird 
of the northern Bahamas, 23; 
notes on the geographical races of 
Tangara gyroloides, 73; descrip- 
tion of a new woodpecker from 
Peru, 85; notes on the species 
and subspecies of Paecilonitta 
Eyton, 87; a new genus of Capri- 
mulgidae, 91; a new race of the 
black-throated green wood war- 
bler, 93; notes on South American 
short-eared owls, 95. 


Barbour, T., 52-54; new ampbhi- 
bians and a new reptile from Sara- 
wak, 19; two new West Indian 
birds, 51. 

Barnes, W., 40, 67, 111, 112. 

Batchelder, C. F., two undescribed 
Newfoundland birds, 81. 

Bates, G. L., 91. 

Beck, R. H., 87, 89, 95-97. 

Biolley, P., 101. 

Borneo, Pongo Mt., 14. 

Limbang River, 19, 20. 
Madalam River, 19. 
Mt. Matang, 16. 

Mt. Mulu, 19. 

Sadong, 21, 22. 
Sarawak, 14, 19-22. 
West Sarawak, 16. 

Bradley, J. C., 83. 

Brazil, Manaos, 106, 113. 
Mogy Forest, 106. 
Para, 70. 

Rio de Janeiro, 44, 58, 106. 
Rio Grande de Sul, 69. 
Santa Catharina, 46. 

Sao Paulo, 106. 

Ururahy, 65. 

Brewster, W., an undescribed race 
of Henslow’s sparrow, 77. 

Brooks, W. 8., 25, 26, 52; two un- 
described birds from the Falkland 
Islands, 25; two new West Indian 
birds, 51. 

Brown, W. W., Jr., 74. 

Bryant, G. E., 16. 

Buchholz, O., 112. 


Canoon, J. C., 82. 
Calasymbolus _ occidentalis, 
114; pl. XIII, fig. 4. 
California, Alta Meadow, 83. 
Mission San José, 105. 


112, 


116 


Calliglutus, 20. 

smithi, 20; pl. I. 
Calophrynus, 19. 

Calospiza bangsi, 74. 

catharinae, 74. 

deleticia, 73: 

gyroloides, 74. 

intermedius, 75. 
Cameroons, 91. 

Fulasi, 109. 

Lolodorf, 64, 103. 
Caprimulgus binotatus, 91, 92. 
Capromys melanurus, 55. 

nana, 54-56. 

pallidus, 55. 

prehensilis, 53-55. 
Carranza Rojas, A. J., 42. 
Cautethia grotei, 107. 

noctuiformis, 107. 

spuria, 107. 

yucatana, 107, 114; pl. XII, 

fig. 3. 

Chilonycteris boothii, 1. 

fuliginosa, 6. 

grisea, 6. 

inflata, 6. 

macleayii, 1, 2, 4-7; pl. I. 

mexicana, 6. 

parnellii, 1, 6. 

personata, 7. 

psilotis, 6. 

quadridens, 4-6. 

rubiginosa, 6. 

torrei, 4-7; pl. I. 
Chlaenogramma obscura, 43, 50, 

101, 114; pl. III, fig. 1; pl. ie 

fig. 3. 

Chrysoptilus atricollis, 86. 

ani, 85. 

Clark, B. P., new American sphin- 
gidae, 39; new sphingidae, 57; 
some undescribed sphingidae, 99. 

Cockerell, T. A. D., 112. 

Colburn, "A. E., 81. 

Colombia, Antioquia, 47. 

Bogoté Savanna, 97. 

Cauca Valley, 59. 

Ricaurte, 75. 

Rio Meta, 76. 

Colorado, Boulder, 112. 

Glenwood Springs, 112. 
Comstock, J. H., 83, 84. 

Congo, Fort Crampel, 63. 

Medje, 62. 

Cory, C. B., 40, 85. 


INDEX 


[P.N.E.Z.C. 


Costa Rica, 48. 
_ Cartago, 32. 
Juan Vinas, 101. 
San José, 101. 
Tula, 101. 
Cryptocerus angulosus, 35. 
rohweri, 32-35. 
texanus, 35. 
varians, 35. 
wheeleri, 32-35. 
Cuba, 95. 
Baracoa, 1, 4. 
Guanajay, 1. 
Maisi, 2. 
Preston, 51. 
San Antonio de los Bafios, 52. 
Sierra de Hato Nuevo, 53. 
Cushman, J. A., 6. 


Dasta moultonii, 22. 
Dendroica aestiva, 82. 
amnicola, 82. 
virens, 93, 94. 
waynei, 93, 94. 
Denton, W. D., 44. 
Dilobocondyla borneénsis, 9, 12-14. 
fouqueti, 14. 
selebensis, 14. 
Dimorphomyrmex janeti, 18. 
luzonensis, 10, 16-18. 
mayri, 18. 
theryi, 18. 
Dognin, P., 40. 
Dolba ae 105, 114; pl. XI, 


fi 

hanes: 59. 

schausi, 59, 72; pl. VIII, fig. 3. 
Dolbogene hartwegi, 60. 

manni, 60, 72; pl. VIII, fig. 5. 
Doll, J., 40, 44, 45, 60, 102, 104, 113. 
Donisthorpe, He 16. 
Duck, Bahama, 87. 


Ecuapor, Nanegal, 76. 
Pichincha, 97. 

Engelhardt, G. P., 41, 57, 104. 

Euproserpinus euterpe, 115. 
phaeton, 113, 114. 


FALKLAND Isds., Port Stanley, 26. 
Port Stephens, 25. 
Sea Lion Isd., 97. 

Fassl, A. H., 48. 


Vol. VI] INDEX 117 
Florida, 35. Lutz, F. E., 


Cape Canaveral, 89. 
Charlotte Harbor, 102. 
Enterprise, 102. 
Fort Schuyler, 102. 
Parish, 105. 

Franck, G., 69. 

Frustorfer, C., 45. 


Gavum_ER, G. F., 107. 
Gerhard, W. J., 40. 
Giacomelli, Eugenio, 101. 
Good, A. I., 103, 109. 
Guatemala, 95. 
Escuintla, 111. 
Iguala, 101. 
Gurelca sonorensis, 100, 108, 114; 


ple ell, fig. 5 


Haiti, Port au Prince, 41. 
Henshaw, S., 40. 

Hewitt, J., 14. 

Holland, W.J ., 40, 64, 65. 
Hooker, W., 73; 74. 


ILurnots, Quincy, 78. 
Indiana, Grand Crossing, 78. 
Kankakee Marshes, 78. 
pees australis, 65, 72; pl. IX, 
5. 


& 

brasiliensis, 106, 114; pl. XII, 
fig. 1. 

menechus, 106. 


mossi, 106, 114; pl. XII, fig. 2. 


papayae, 65. 
Isogramma hageni, 68. 
Isoparce cupressi, 68. 


JAMAICA, 1. 
Johnson, O. B., 61. 
Jordan, K., 40, 61. 
Jouy, P. L., 78. 


LAFRESNAYE, F. de, 75. 

Lanthanotus, 19. 

Lapara halicarniae, 68, 102, 114; 
pl. XT, fig. 13 \ pl. STINE fig. 1p 

Lea, A. M., 12. 

Libyoclanis bainbridgei, 62. 


hollandi, 62, 72; pl. VII, fig. 3. 


major, 62. 
Lobostoma quadridens, 2, 4. 
Louisiana, Baton Rouge, 67. 


40. 
Lycosphingia hollandi, 64, 72; pl. 
II, fig. 4. 
Lyman, So: 


Many, W. M.., 41, 57, 60, 108. 
Mas-a-Tierra Isd., 96. 
Massachusetts, Middlesex Co., 78. 
Osterville, 79. 
May, E., 58, 106. 
Maynard, ¢. dos PBL 
McDunnough, J., 40. 
McLeannan, J., 74. 
Metapone bakeri, 9-12. 
greeni, 12. 
mj6bergi, 12. 
sauteri, 12. 
Mexico, Carbo, 108. 
Copete Mine, 108. 
Guerrero, 60. 
Jalisco, 112. 
Missantha, 58. 
Orizaba, 66. 
Sonora, 108. 
Microhyla leucostigma, 19. 
Miller, G.S8., Jr., 1. 
Mimus delenificus, 23. 
Mississippi, Greenville, 67. 
Mockingbird, 28. 
Monarda oryx, 112. 
Moss, A. M., 40, (0, a 113. 
Moulton, J. on 19, 2 
Myrmoteras eel 16. 
donisthorpei, 9, 14-16. 


NEWFOUNDLAND, Curslet, 82. 
Deer Pond, 81. 

New South Wales, Dorrego, 12. 

Nicholas, F. C., 108. 

Noble, G. K., 85; new amphibians 
and a new reptile from Sarawak, 
19; description of a new wood- 
pecker from Peru, 85. 

Nyceryx ericea, 46. 

minor, 46, "50; pl. V, fig. 
mulleri, 66, 72; ck Vili, fie. 2. 


OBERTHUR, C., 40. 
Orecta eos, 99. 
fruhstorferi, 45, 50, 99; pl. V, 
fig. 4. 
lycidas, 45, 99. 
Otus breviauris, 96. 
Ovenbird, 81. 


118 


Owl, short-eared, 95-98. 
Oxyambulyx johnsoni, 61, 72; pl. 
VIII, fig. 1. 
staudingeri, 100. 
wilemani, 100. 


PAECILONITTA bahamensis, 87-89. 
erythrorhyncha, 88, 89. 
galapagensis, 88, 89. 
rubrirostris, 88, 89. 
spinicauda, 88, 89. 

Palmer, W., 1. 

Panama, Loma del Leon, 74. 
Panama City, 74. 

Passerherbulus henslowi, 77-79. 
occidentalis, 79. 
susurrans, 77-79. 

Penard, T. E., 87. 

Perigonia bahamensis, 

pl. XII, fig. 4. 
interrupta, 108. 

Perry, G., 89. 

Peru, Chanchamayo, 44. 
Huancabamba, 85. 
Huancabamba River, 86. 

Peters, J. L., 51; a new swift from 

Santo Domingo, 37. 

Petrochelidon cavicola, 52. 
fulva, 52. 
poeciloma, 52. 

Pheidole absurda, 29-32. 
ridicula, 29-32. 

Phillips, J. C., 26. 

Philippine Isds., Luzon, 12, 18. 
Manila, 61. 

Mt. Banahao, 12. 
Mt. Makiling, 18. 

Pholus elisa, 68. 

intermedia, 67, 72, 100; pl. IX, 
for 

licaon, 68. 

pandorus, 68. 

Phrygillus malvinarum, 25. 
melanoderus, 26. 

Pintail, Bahama, 87. 

Galapagos, 88. 
South American, 88. 
Fopuycny roseola, 63, 72; pl. IX, 


g. 2. 
Pondoland, West, 110. 
Porto Rico, Rio Piedras, 100. 
Protambulyx carteri, 68. 
Protoparce afflicta, 42, 50; pl. III, 
fig. 3. 


108, 114; 


INDEX 


[P.N.E.Z.C, 


Protoparce (continued) 
bahamensis, 41, 57; pl. III, fig. 
2 


bamesi 111, 14> py sae 


g. 3. 
brontes, 41, 100. 
cubensis, 100. 
florestan, 42, 101, 111. 
franciscae, 42, 111; pl. VI, 
Ags 213: 
haitensis, 41, 100; pl. IV, figs. 
1,2 


hoffmanni, 58, 72; pl. VII, fig. 
1 


leucoptera, 42. 

lichenea, 101. 

mayi, 58, 72; pl. VII, fig. 2. 

schausi, 101, 114; pl. X, fig. 2. 

sexta, 102, 114; pl. XIII, fig. 2. 

smythi, 100, 114; pl. X, fig. 1. 
Pseudoclanis karschi, 103, 114; pl. 

XI, fig. 2. 


QUEENSLAND, Mt. Tamborine, 12. 


RaMSDEN, C. T., 55. 
Rana laterimaculata, 21. 
Reis, T. A., 64. 

Riley, J. H., 1. 
Rodriguez, V. J., 4, 52. 
Rohwer, 8. A., 34. 
Rothschild, W., 40. 


SANFORD, L. C., 87. 
St. Bartholomew Isd., 95. 
Santo Domingo, Sostia, 37. 
Schaeffer, C., 35. 
Schaus, W., 40, 59, 101, 102, 111. 
Schwab, G., 91. 
Scott, C. L., 31. 
Seiurus aurocapillus, 81. 
furvior, 81. 
Skinner, H., 40. 
Smerinthus ophthalmica ab. nigres- 
cens, 105, 114; pl. XI, fig. 5. 
Smith, H. W., 19-22. 
South Carolina, Mount Pleasant, 
93, 94. 
Sparrow, Eastern Henslow’s, 78. 
Henslow’s, 77, 79. 
Sphinx coloradus, 104. 
dolli, 104, 112. 
engelhardti, 104, 114; pl. XI, 
fig. 3. 
halicarnie, 102. 


Vol. VI] 


Staudinger, O., 46. 

Streptoprocne melanotis, 37. 
zonaris, 37. 

Stuart, C. M., 46. 

Swift, collared, 37. 


TanaGER, blue-rumped green, 73. 

Tangara bangsi, 74-76. 
catharinae, 74-76. 
gyroloides, 73-76. 


nupera, 76. 
Temnora avinoffi, 109, 114; pl. 
, fig. 6. 
brunescens, 110, 114; pl. XII, 
es Tho 
wallastoni, 110. 
Texas, Brownsville, 31, 35, 67. 
San Diego, 31. 
Todus exilis, 51. 
Torre, C. de la, 2, 5, 53. 


Uran, Bellevue, 104. 
Washington Co., 104. 


Veles, 92. 
Venezuela, 45. 
Caracas, 42. 
Vermileo comstocki, 83, 84. 


PLATES 


119 


Virginia, Fairfax Co., 78. 
Falls Church, 78. 


WarBLER, black-throated green 
wood, 93, 94. 
yellow, 81. 

Washington (DoCS 

Watson, F. E., 40. 

Wayne, A. T., "93, 94. 

Wheeler, four new and interesting 
ants from the mountains of 
Borneo and Luzon, 9; two new 
ants from Texas and Arizona, 29; 
Vermileo comstocki sp. nov., an 
interesting leptid fly from Cali- 
fornia, 83. 

Wisecnsin, Walworth Co., 78. 

Wood, W. C., 40. 


XYLOPHANES jordani, 48, 50; pl. 
g. 3. 
marginalis, 69, 72; pl. IX, fig. 
3. 
mirabilis, 47, 50; pl. VI, fig. 1. 
mossi, 70, 72; pl. IX, fig. 4. 
thyelia, 49, 50; pl. V, fig. 2. 
wolfi, 113. 


Yucatan, Izamel, 107. 


PLATES 
Facing: 
page 
Puate I. 8 
Chilonycteris torrei and Chilonycteris. macleayit. 
Puate II. 22 
Type of Calliglutus smithi. 
Puats III. 50) 


Fig. 1. 


Fig. 3. 


Chlaenogramma obscura sp. nov. 
Fig. 2. Protoparce afflicta bahamensis subsp. nov. 
Protoparce afflicta afflicta Grote. 


Female. 
Male. 
Male. 


120 


Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 


Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 


Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 


Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 


Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 


Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 


AT ee hs NS 


NS 


A 


SN aL eS Ie aes 


ON a Se 


PLATES 


Puate IV. 


Protoparce brontes haitiensis subsp. nov. Male. 
Protoparce brontes haitiensis subsp. nov. Female. 


Amplypterus palmert brasiliensis subsp. nov. Male. 


PLATE VY. 


Amplypterus gannascus dentont subsp. nov. Male. 


Xylophanes thyelia Linné. Male. 
Xylophanes jordani sp nov. Male. 
Orecta frustorferi sp. nov. Male. 
Nyceryx ericea minor subsp. nov. Male. 


Puate VI. 


Xylophanes mirabilis sp. nov. Male. 
Protoparce franciscae sp. nov. Male. 
Protoparce franciscae sp. nov. Female. 


Puate VII. 


Protoparce hoffmanni sp. nov. Female. 
Protoparce hannibal mayi subsp. nov. Male. 
Libyoclanis hollandi sp. nov. Female. 


Puate VIII. 


Oxyambuliz liturata johnsoni subsp. nov. Female. 
Nycerix mulleri sp. nov. Male. 

Dolba schausi sp. nov. Female. 

Lycosphingia hollandi sp. nov. Male. 

Dolbogene manni sp. nov. Male. 


Puate IX. 


Pholus, satellitia intermedia subsp. nov. Male. 
Polyptychus roseola sp. nov. Male. 


Xylophanes tyndarus marginalis subsp. nov. Male. 


Xylophanes mossi sp. nov. Male. 
Isognathus rimosa australis subsp. nov. Male. 


[P.N.E.Z.C. 


Facing 
page 


50 


50 


72 


72 


Vol. VI] 


Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 


Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 


Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 
Fig. 


Fig. 
Fig. 


Fig. 
Fig. 


bo 


ea econo. 


PLATES 


PLATE X. 


Protoparce brontes smythi subsp. nov. Female. 


Protoparce schaust sp. nov. Male. 
Chlaenogramma obscura Clark. Male. 


Puate XI. 


Lapara halicarniae (Strecker). Female. 
Pseudoclanis karschi R. and J. Male. 
Sphinx dolli engelhardti subsp. nov. Male. 
Dolba hylaeus floridensis subsp. nov. Female. 
Smerinthus cerisyi ophthalmica ab. nigrescens. 


Puate XII. 


Isognathus rimosa brasiliensis subsp. nov. Male. 


Isognathus mossi sp. nov. Male. 
Cautethia yucatana sp. nov. Female. 


Perigonia lusca bahamensis subsp. nov. Female. 


Gurelca sonorensis sp. nov. Male. 
Temnora avinoffi sp. nov. Male. 
Temnora brunescens sp. nov. Female. 


PuatTe XIII. 


Lapara halicarniae (Strecker). Female. Type. 
Protoparce sexta sexta Johansson. Outline of hypertro- 


phied female. 
Protoparce barnesi sp. nov. Female. 


Calasymbolus myops occidentalis subsp. nov. Female. 


121 


Facing 
page 


114 


114 


114 


114 


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PANE Earn Camo Vil PLATE | 


CHILONYCTERIS TORREI AND CHILONYCTERIS MACLEAYII 


RIRSINGie 2G. VOLS Vl PLATE II 


TYPE OF CALLIGLUTUS SMITHI 


PRON: EvZ. iG. Vol, Vi PLATE III 


J. Henry Elake, del. The Heliotype Co. Boston. 


PR Nee Asie Vol. Vil PLATE IV 


J. Henry Blake, del. The Heliotype Co. Boston. 


PRaINwE. ZO... VOL. Vil PLATE V 


J. Henry Blake, del. The Heliotype Co., Boston. 


REN IE 45 (Ge, WHOIS WAI PLATE VI 


J. Henry Blake, del. The Heliotype Co. Boston. 


PRenNeEs 4. O., Vol. VI PLATE VII 


J. Henry Blake, del. The Heliotype Co., Boston. 


Pn Nels 45 (Cre Wolke WI PLATE VIII 


J. Henry Blake, del. The Heliotype Co., Boston 


PRe ING EZ. Ge VOL. Vi PLATE IX 


J. Henry Blake. del. The Heliotype Co., Boston. 


FRE, Maden Za Tag WLS WA PLATE X 


J. Henry Blake, del. i The Heliotype Co., Boston. 


RR NeEs 2.1G., VOL. VI PLATE X| 


J. Henry Blake, del. The Heliotype Co., Boston. 


PReiNeeieAn Or, VOL. Vil PLATE XII 


6 7 
J. Henry Blake, del. The Heliotype Co., Boston. 


AR Wie Bia 74a (Cia NCTE NA PLATE XIIl 


J. Henry Blake, del. The Heliotype Co., Boston. 


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